Mental strength key
Golf has always been a game that demands a considerable degree of mental fortitude. For McLay, and all the other golfers with a disability, it is very much a case of mind over matter.
“When I was really struggling, I did a lot of sports psychology,” said McLay, who remains eternally grateful to the golfing support and assistance he has had from the Royal Musselburgh PGA professional, Calum Smith.
“I can play a lot of golf in my head. I don’t practice a lot, but I work a lot on the visualisation side of it. You need mental strength in golf, more so when you have a disability. You must believe it to achieve it.”
The G4D Open, held in partnership between The R&A and the DP World Tour and supported by EDGA, is one of the most inclusive ever staged, featuring nine sport classes across multiple impairment groups, with players representing 19 countries.
A field of 80 male and female amateur and professional golfers will compete over 54 holes at the Duchess Course at Woburn across sport classes which cover various categories in Standing, Intellectual, Visual and Sitting.
Spectators are welcome to attend at Woburn this week, with attendance and car parking free of charge.
Kluwen hopes
When Richard Kluwen was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis 25 years ago, his plan to deal with the disease included taking up a sport. After some deliberation, he chose golf, and has never looked back. The way he sees it, the game didn’t just help him, mentally as well as physically. It saved his life.
At first, the Dutchman struggled to stay on his feet as he swung the club, but a move into seated golf has been transformational, on and off the course. He has become fitter, more flexible and, perhaps most significantly, able to approach the rest of his day-to-day challenges with a positive mindset.
He has also become quite the competitor. The 52-year-old winner of several national and international prizes retained his European title last year and will be among a talented field teeing it up at Woburn.
Kluwen has come a long way, with a little help from the sport he loves. “At first, I was a standing golfer,” he says. “I stopped counting how many times I was falling on the golf course. That’s no fun. So I changed to using a Paragolfer. It’s a different game, but I’m not falling and I’m having fun.
“You know the game — it’s addictive. And your mindset must be OK. That is my biggest win — not prizes or scores, but the mindset, which I take into the rest of my life. Just relax and take one thing at a time.”
Golf saved his life
A former machinist, Kluwen gradually learned to leave his career behind, make the most of passions such as golf and enjoy the life he has with his wife and three children. “It’s no exaggeration to say that golf saved my life,” he continues. “It’s because of golf that I learned the difference between the important things and the non-important things. In the beginning of my illness, I wanted to work and provide for my family, but now I know that, if you can’t do that, it’s OK.
“It took a couple of years to get my mindset from the technician always working and helping other people to being a happy house dad. Just enjoy life.”
Mentally, he felt much better, but physically it was still a struggle for Kluwen, who decided three years ago, with the support of a crowd-funding campaign, to undergo a stem cell transplant in Moscow. It took a full year to recover from the chemotherapy, but it has been worth it for the Tillborg man, who can now walk short distances and no longer needs to use a wheelchair at home.
He said, “The damage to my nervous system is still there, but my energy level is much higher. I can be busy the whole day now. It’s such a big difference.”