Steve Mona: Golf Industry Aims to Diversify ‘The Game of Kings’

EURweb Logo

*Steve Mona, CEO of the World Golf Foundation, says strong words about an overwhelmingly white, $70 billion business.

“The golf industry should look like America,” Mona told Urban News Service. “Diversity is fundamental to the future success of the golf industry.”

Mona,who is white, says that when he surveys golf courses around the country, he says he mainly sees two colors: green and white.

Golf industry reports confirm Mona’s impression. American golfers are 77 percent male and 80 percent white, according to the 2015 Golf Diversity & Inclusion Report. Among professional golfers, 75 percent are male and 86 percent are white. And golf-industry workers–every one from caddies to greenskeepers– are 90 percent male and 88 percent white.

Golf remains a big business in America. Some 25 million Americans play 455 million rounds annually on 15,350 links, according to World Golf Foundation. Golf generates some $55.6 billion in annual wages.

Asked why a white executive like Mona worries about racial diversity, Mona didn’t hesitate. “It’s the right thing to do,” he said. “We want to make young people and parents from diverse backgrounds aware that there are 2 million jobs in the golf industry.”

He is matching his words with action. He created a Diversity Task Force, established partnerships with major companies and will host a diversity forum in December with major industry leaders.

Mona plans to create job opportunities for minorities with a range of diversity initiatives include:

— A 10-week paid internship program with the Professional Golf Association Tour.

— The Golf Channel’s internship openings now appear on the careers website its parent company, NBCUniversal.

— Nike Golf now offers a 12-week internship that explores all of the company’s divisions.

The World Golf Foundation also seeks African-Americans and other minorities, Mona said, for full-time jobs at courses across America, including head golf professionals, course superintendents, caddy masters, and food and beverage managers.

These steps are afoot even as younger golfers are leaving the sport. About 200,000 Millennial golfers walked away in 2013, according to the National Golf Federation, mainly because of costs in time and money. Golfers between 18 and 34 have drifted off for the last 20 years, according to NGF research.

Major golf gear manufacturers also are retrenching. Nike recently announced that it would stop making golf clubs, balls and bags. Instead, Nike will focus on golf attire.

While Tiger Woods remains Earth’s highest-profile black golfer, Mona’s Diversity Task Force confirms just how rare his face is on the greens.

Little has changed in golf since the demographics of it s players and staff was first studied in 2003, said Diversity Task Force member Dr. Michael Cooper. “I haven’t seen a lot of what is supposed to be taking place, and I can’t vouch for golf becoming more inclusive and diverse than it is,’” Cooper said. “But I do have faith in Steve Mona.”

“With regard to racial diversity, this is a work in progress,” said Cooper, who has played for 48 years. “And we have an awful long way to go.”

Can Mona convince other golf industry leaders to take diversity seriously?

“If we don’t have Steve Mona, we’re nowhere,” Cooper said. “He’s a fair man, and he’s the most committed [white] guy in a leadership position in the golf industry I’ve seen. But can he move this boulder by himself?”

EURweb Logo

Clemmie Perry,the founder of Women of Color Golf, is looking to introduce more minority women to the “sport of kings.” She said she has trained more than 250 women — 95 percent of whom are black — to play golf since she launched her group in 2013.

“I didn’t see any women on the golf course who looked like me,” Perry said. “I’m creating pathways for women to enter the game. Golf is about access. Golf is giving [black] women access to business relationships they would never have. We can’t get the jobs if we don’t have the relationships.”

Perry, a Tampa resident, first took up golf after finding a set of clubs on the side of the road. When Lockheed Martin laid her off from an executive post in 2012, she used her severance to start Women of Color Golf.

Even former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, an avid golfer, wants to see more minorities on the putting greens. It’s important that “golf look like America,” Rice said.

source: Urban News Service

We Publish News 24/7. Don’t Miss A Story. Click HERE to SUBSCRIBE to Our Newsletter Now!

TikTok is Back - via Grok AI
Black Division 1 Athletes - via Grok AI
Michael Irvin
TikTok banned in US - via Grok AI
Ruby Freeman - Rudy Giuliani - Shaye Moss
Nelly performing for Trump - via Grok AI
target trans clothing for kids
LeBron and Savannah James - Getty
Who's the hero? Entertainer or Firefighter?
Deion Sanders
Cooking With Kya
Read More
Ryan Levert - via Instagram
Read More
Otis Williams (Stefan Brending via Creative Commons)
Read More
Aaron Pierre - screenshot
Read More
George W. Bush - Donald Trump (Getty)
Read More
Denzel Washington getting baptized
Read More
Jimmy Butler & Kaitlin Nowak - screenshot
Read More
Shamsud Din Jabbar - YouTube screenshot
Read More
WICKED: PART 1
Read More
New Orleans New Years Eve Terror Attack
Read More

POPULAR

Nelly and Donald Trump - via Grok AI
Nelly Stands by Decision to Perform at Trump’s Inauguration: 'Respect the Office' and 'Performing Doesn’t Equal Supporting' | WATCH
Charlamagne Tha God and Donald Trump - via Grok AI
From Criticism to Confusion: Charlamagne Tha God Reevaluates Trump's Threat Level | LISTEN
TikTok is Back - via Grok AI
Like it Never Even Happened - TikTok Back Online After Trump Pledged to Restore it | WATCH
Wendy Williams and Sean 'Diddy' Combs - via Grok
Wendy Williams Predicts Life in Prison For Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs | VIDEO
Snoop Dogg - shows peace sign after performing at Trump Crystal Ball
Snoop Dogg Seems Unfazed by Controversy - Celebrates Cryptocurrency at Trump’s Gala | WATCH
Black Division 1 Athletes - via Grok AI
Get Your Money! Claim Your Compensation - How Black D1 Athletes Can Benefit From $2.8 Billion NCAA Settlement
Donald Trump as superhero saving TikTok - via Grok AI
TikTok Goes Dark! 170 Million Users React to Sudden 'Temporary' Shutdown - Daddy Donald Says He'll Step in | VIDEO
Michael Irvin
X User’s Hilarious Suggestion to Marvel: 'Cast Michael Irvin As Black Panther' - Check Out Priceless Reactions | VIDEOs
American Eagle with Letter from Unity - via Grok AI
A Letter from Unity - An Anonymous Message Encourages Americans to Reconnect Amidst Division | VIDEO
1 2 3 8,508