⭐ Governance, Power & Pathways
Why the structures that govern women’s golf no longer match the lives of the women they serve.
Introduction: Governance Is the Architecture of Opportunity
Every pathway, every age group, every competition and every experience women have in golf is shaped by governance — the policies, structures, and priorities that determine what the sport values.
But modern governance did not begin with a blank page.
It inherited 130 years of architecture built around:
-
amateur ideals,
-
weekday availability,
-
volunteer leadership,
-
senior women’s unpaid labour,
-
class-based access,
-
and gendered assumptions about time and money.
When governing bodies modernised, they often modernised around this old architecture, not instead of it.
The result is a system filled with contradictions and gaps — a structure that no longer fits the women who play.
⭐ 1. How Governance Shapes Who Gets Seen — and Who Gets Missed
Governance decisions determine:
-
Which age groups receive investment
-
Which competitions are considered “pathways”
-
What counts as “development”
-
Where funding goes
-
Who is asked to volunteer
-
Who is considered “strategic” or “non-strategic”
-
What data is collected — and what isn’t
-
Which parts of the game are visible nationally
-
Whose needs shape scheduling and structure
This makes governance the most powerful filter in modern women’s golf.
Not intentionally — but structurally.
⭐ 2. The Legacy Problem: Modern Governance Built on Old Foundations
When the LGU structures merged into national governing bodies (England Golf, Scottish Golf, Golf Ireland, etc.), two things happened simultaneously:
1. The responsibilities expanded
→ more focus on equality, safeguarding, strategy, sport equity, participation, performance
2. The historical women’s structures were abolished or absorbed
→ county women’s committees weakened
→ senior/veteran networks marginalised
→ weekday golf deprioritised
→ volunteer-led governance perceived as outdated
→ independent women’s associations treated as peripheral
This created a governance landscape where the modern priorities and the historic architecture no longer aligned.
The system was modernised — but the pathways were not rebuilt from scratch.
⭐ 3. The Missing Middle: Why Pathways Collapse Between 25 and 49
One of the biggest structural failures in women’s golf globally is the absence of a viable pathway for working-age women.
Modern governance focuses on:
-
juniors (via academies, talent ID, elite programmes)
-
seniors (via veteran/senior frameworks and independent associations)
-
elite amateurs and professionals (via performance programmes)
But the group in between — women aged roughly 20 to 55 — faces:
-
weekday competitions they can’t play
-
weekend competitions dominated by men’s structures
-
teams and championships scheduled on weekdays
-
caring responsibilities
-
financial pressures
-
lack of coaching access
-
no defined “mid-amateur” identity
-
no recognised national pathway
-
no retention strategy
This is the largest and most economically active group of women in sport —
and the least structurally supported.
The absence of a mid-amateur pathway is not a failure of women.
It is a failure of the architecture.
⭐ 4. Why Senior Women Fall Out of Governance Visibility
Senior women are still the backbone of club and county life — but at national level, they are often seen as:
-
non-performance
-
non-commercial
-
non-youth
-
volunteer-led
-
traditional
-
weekday-based
-
low priority for funding metrics
This is not deliberate exclusion.
It is structural misalignment.
Most national strategies are built around:
-
participation targets
-
performance pathways
-
competition equality
-
high-performance funding
-
junior growth
-
data-driven metrics
-
commercial visibility
Senior women fit none of these frameworks neatly.
Yet they sustain the sport at ground level.
This creates a gap between where governance looks and where the game lives.
⭐ 5. The Power Gap: When Women’s Golf Lost Its Own Voice
Before the LGU merger, women governed women’s golf.
They:
-
set policies,
-
shaped competitions,
-
built talent pathways,
-
protected senior women’s roles,
-
managed county structures,
-
held national influence.
After the merger, women’s governance became:
-
a department within a larger multi-gender organisation,
-
subject to mixed-gender boards,
-
accountable to new funding models,
-
dependent on national sport strategy requirements,
-
restructured into performance-first frameworks.
This did not eliminate women’s influence —
but it diluted women’s independent voice.
Without an independent governance structure, women’s priorities no longer shaped the system in the same way.
This created:
-
invisible loss,
-
quiet grief,
-
institutional displacement,
-
and a structural power gap.
⭐ 6. Why Independent Women’s Associations Became “Out of System”
Women’s veteran/senior associations (founded between 1921 and 1970 in most countries) continued operating independently because:
-
they were never formally integrated,
-
they rely on weekday play,
-
they are volunteer-led,
-
they represent a demographic rarely prioritised by modern governance.
As governance structures modernised:
-
independent associations appeared “ungovernable,”
-
unofficial,
-
non-performance
-
and not aligned with funding frameworks.
Yet these associations:
-
hold history,
-
foster community,
-
sustain competitive golf,
-
protect traditions
-
and support women who would otherwise be lost to the game.
They exist because women built structures where governance once created no space.
Today, they are at risk —
not because they failed,
but because governance frameworks changed around them.
⭐ 7. The Pathway Problem: A System Out of Sync With Women’s Lives
Modern pathways assume:
-
weekend access
-
full-time athlete commitment
-
early specialisation
-
travel flexibility
-
high-cost participation
-
availability for weekday county/elite training
-
financial independence
-
minimal caring responsibilities
These assumptions work better for:
✔ juniors and collegiate-age women
✔ elite amateurs
✔ women without major life obligations
They work poorly for:
✘ working women
✘ women with dependents
✘ mid-amateurs
✘ women returning after motherhood
✘ club-level competitive players
✘ senior women
This is why the participation funnel collapses.
Golf’s pathways were never redesigned for modern women’s lives.
⭐ 8. Why None of This Is About Blame
It is essential that this page affirms:
-
governing bodies inherited the system
-
counties inherited the system
-
clubs inherited the system
-
senior women inherited the system
-
working women inherited the system
No one created these problems.
The architecture created them.
This is why the Women’s Golf History Project is needed:
to make the invisible visible — so solutions can be built without blame.
⭐ Conclusion: Governance Must Evolve to Fit Women’s Real Lives
If we want:
-
more women playing,
-
more women competing,
-
more senior women feeling valued,
-
more mid-amateurs staying in the game,
-
more girls transitioning into adulthood in golf,
-
and more connection between generations…
…then governance has to move from:
“How do we add women into existing structures?”
towards
“How do we build structures aligned to women’s real lives?”
This requires:
-
listening to senior women
-
understanding working women
-
supporting mid-amateurs
-
integrating independent women’s associations
-
redesigning weekday/weekend balance
-
creating pathways that support real life, not ideal life
-
honouring the past while building the future
This is not a small task.
But it begins with clarity — and the courage to redesign the architecture, not the women.
