Valentina Rossi became Women’s Amateur Latin America (WALA) champion in 2022 and Mateo Fernandez de Oliveira won the Latin America Amateur Championship (LAAC) in 2023. The programme helps elite amateur players to fulfil their potential through a focus on academic and technical development.
Miguel Leeson is the Executive Director and CEO of Argentina Golf Association. In a recent issue of Developing Golf, our new online magazine providing best practice for affiliated national federations and other bodies, Miguel talks to us about the importance of junior and high-performance players, the Association’s successes, it’s longstanding relationship with The R&A and its plans for the future.
How has The R&A helped Argentina Golf?
ML: “We've had a pretty long relationship with The R&A and, in the old days, the biggest help we got was imitating their structure, the way they work and how they go about things, being more professional and the Rules of Golf. Then The R&A started the programme of developing golf and giving support to some championships regionally. And in education, they got involved in getting very important people coming to give lectures and conferences and helping financially with costs.
It was the same in education for coaching, they got involved and started giving financial support and getting the proper people to come. And that was very important. Now we present our development projects and if they get approved, we get some funding. Two projects we’ve worked quite a bit on is Ladies 9, which is a project of nine-hole tournaments for women and agronomic internships and education. For juniors, the Latin America Amateur Championship (LAAC) is great to give opportunities to the high-performance kids. That kind of opportunity, giving that kind of competition and that kind of support, is super important.”
ML: “I would say those are products of a lot of our work, together with the parents and together with their clubs. Mateo was with us when he was 13 years old. He got selected for the programme that was talking about the Youth Olympic Games that were played in Buenos Aires in 2018. And Valentina is maybe the same, she’s been with us since she was 12 years old. It's not automatic, we started the LAAC in 2015 and we had lots of expectations. We had players that could have won it, but we didn't win for about four or five years. And suddenly, they come in pairs, as has happened this year.
“Mateo and Valentina are a product of, obviously other things, but also the planification we've done working for them since they were 12 or 13 years old. They went to college – that's what we try and get the kids to do, saying it's the best way to get there eventually. The kids are part of our work, and we get involved with these high performance kids from a very young age.”