Coxmoor Golf Club secretary confident of future after suspension of sport

Work is currently going on around Coxmoor Golf Club in preparation for when golf is allowed to return. (Photo by Tony Marshall/Getty Images)Work is currently going on around Coxmoor Golf Club in preparation for when golf is allowed to return. (Photo by Tony Marshall/Getty Images)
Work is currently going on around Coxmoor Golf Club in preparation for when golf is allowed to return. (Photo by Tony Marshall/Getty Images)
Secretary Colin Bee has no fears over the future of Coxmoor Golf Club following the latest suspension.

Golf is currently on hold as a result of the nationwide lockdown with little prospect of a return to the greens until mid-February at best.

But Bee says the popular Sutton club will be just fine thanks to the support of its members.

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“We are a pretty strong club,” he said. “We have a strong membership base. It is subscription time at the moment and they are still coming in nicely.

Stephen Topping competes during the PGA Assistants' Championship at Coxmoor.Stephen Topping competes during the PGA Assistants' Championship at Coxmoor.
Stephen Topping competes during the PGA Assistants' Championship at Coxmoor.

People are keen to just get playing again and hopefully we can do that by the middle of February.

“The members have given us great support. We have some visitors but we are very much a members club.

“We have tried to provide as much as we can while it's been difficult. It's a very busy club, people just want to play golf.”

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Bee revealed the club has seen a big reduction in revenue following the closure of their bar and catering facilities.

Members subscriptions and tight costs have helped the club. (Photo by Tony Marshall/Getty Images)Members subscriptions and tight costs have helped the club. (Photo by Tony Marshall/Getty Images)
Members subscriptions and tight costs have helped the club. (Photo by Tony Marshall/Getty Images)

He added: “We are probably down in excess of 25 to 30 per cent in revenue, but we have offset that with government help and grants and have kept costs to a minimum.

“The bar and catering staff have been furloughed, but we’ve not laid anyone off. We run a tight ship anyway.”

The club is currently keeping busy with maintenance work around the course as they prepare for a return.

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And Bee hopes there is light at the end of the tunnel, with golf perhaps better placed than most sports due to its socially-distanced nature.

“The natural etiquette of the sport means you are not on top of each other,” he said. “You walk around the reservoir and people are walking side by side.

“Our members have been very good at following the guidelines, but until the vaccine programme is rolled out to everyone things won't get back to full normality.

“There will be a gradual easing and hopefully by the summer we can see things back to normal circumstances.

“Whether everything fully goes back to normal who knows, but something has to change soon.”

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