Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

MIDEGT GOLF BOOM

rniFE battle of midget golf is on! In 1 London and the South the craze is practically over, nut. in parts of the North the new game grows an popularity (savs the “Sunday Chronicle. ’ ) The fate of a large number of speculators hangs in the balance. Already big sums of money have been lost in the attempt to produce in this country a midget golf craze similar to that which swept America. But fortunes may still be made! Inquiries made by' the “Sundaj Chronicle” show that already many miniature golf courses have been closed down in London. Yet in Manchester rhe game seems to have caught on, and several additional new courses are about to be opened. Within the past three weeks 2i2 sets of a popular design have been sold in .Scotland. In Glasgow, in particular, the game is booming, and the present courses are crowded, while others are in process of construction. In London there has been nothing like the boom in midget golf that was expected. The “boom” there lasted scarcely a couple of weeks. There is one course in the West End which attracted crowds of people during the first week after its opening. It was difficult to get a game there. Recently on the same course in one hour only six people played. “ Undoubtedly a great many people have lost money on midget golf,” the manager of a club •who installed one of the courses told the “Sunday Chronicle.” ‘ln our case we spent more than £2OO on a patent course. The outfit to-day" is worth, perhaps, twenty or thirty pounds, and our total takings have been negligible. ‘We gambled on the craze for midget golf lasting six months and took premises at a heavy rental. We calculated the average number of players per day we should need to make a decent profit. The fact that on only

Ups and Downs of Latest Craze

two or three days after the first week lias the number been up to that average shows’how thorough the ‘flop’ has

The course at a Manchester stores is crowded by business men in the lunch hour, and Newcastle business men manage to put in a quarter of an hour at a course at a cinema when they go out for morning coffee. “We find the same people returning day after day,” said the manageress of the latter,' ‘ ‘ and although we do not have Sunday play our patrons are allowed to practise on Sundays, so intent are they on improving their scores as they progress in the game.” A Newcastle garage proprietor who has had his garage converted into an eighteenhole course has also fitted a larger course with more ordinary hazards. This, he says, attracts expert golfers, who have no patience in dodging pipes, tunnels, ponds and the like with which the smaller courses are equipped. In Liverpool a number of people spend the whole lunch hour playing, while others play almost every day, but except for lunch time and when the nearby workshops are closed for the day the courses now are not very busy. Seldom more than two people play at a time. 'Often there arc more watchers than golfers. Proprietors of other courses in the North have varying experiences. They have a regular number of patrons, but many arc of the opinion that the craze will die a natural death within the next few months. But they mean to make a flight to get back their money. A well-known golfer told the “Sunday Chronicle” he believed that if the game were staged in its proper atmosphere —in the open air—and if something decent in the way of putting problems wore introduced, together with more scope for chip shots, it would take on.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAWST19310110.2.130

Bibliographic details

Hawera Star, Volume L, 10 January 1931, Page 16

Word Count
627

MIDEGT GOLF BOOM Hawera Star, Volume L, 10 January 1931, Page 16

MIDEGT GOLF BOOM Hawera Star, Volume L, 10 January 1931, Page 16