The
following column by Peter Shaerf first appeared on the Shivas Irons Society
website six years ago. It was inspired by the first European Tour win
of Indian born golfer Arjun Atwal at the 2002 Caltex Singapore Masters.
With Atwal's latest victory on March 9, 2008 at the Malaysian Open
it seems like the perfect time to visit this article again.
(March 10, 2002) When Arjun Atwal of India won the Caltex
Singapore Masters a couple of weeks ago, the focus turned to a rising
star from a country not known for golfing greatness. But Atwal’s
win brought to mind one of the great pioneers of golf on a very different
level – Sewsunker “Papwa” Sewgolum.
Sewgolum was an Indian caddie who left a major golf legacy. That his
name is not well known and that his entry is absent from many leading
golf encyclopaedias is a travesty that ought to be redressed.
Sewgolum grew up in South Africa and caddied at the prestigious all white
Beachwood Country Club. Sewgolum was completely self taught, and in an
age when we have become familiar with the cross handed putting grip (
see “Puttering
Around for Success”), Sewgolum played EVERY shot with a reverse,
left-hand low grip. Famed teacher Phil Ritson actually describes Sewgolum
as the “Father of the cross-handed grip”, and Ben Wright, who
recalled seeing Sewgolum at the Dutch Open ( a tournament Sewgolum won
three times – in 1959, 1960 and 1964), observed that clearly this
was a self taught player as noone would have or could have taught that
particular swing!
How successful a player he might have been in South Africa will remain
one of that country’s imponderables. Growing up in an apartheid environment
where the rules required the whites and non–whites compete separately
in individual sports, Sewgolum was a virtual outcast.
In the early 1960’s the rules were beginning to be challenged, and
in 1963 Sewgolum competed and was runner-up in the South African Open
at the Royal Durban Country Club.
In 1965, in arguably his greatest triumph, he won the Natal Open at the
same Royal Durban Country Club, beating the likes of Gary Player (who
that same year completed the “Grand Slam”) and Harold Henning.
Apartheid was still strong at that time, and not only did the South African
Broadcasting Corporation completely ignore the result, but Sewgolum was
forced to accept his trophy standing out in the rain as it was passed
to him through an open clubhouse window. Non-whites were not allowed to
enter the clubhouse.
When black kids grew up in the 1960s and 70s, they were not taught to
say: “Wow, that Gary Player is great!” but instead, “Damn,
if Papwa Sewgolum had only been given the opportunity, he would have been
greater than Player.”
Almost forty years later South Africa has undergone a political transformation
that has not only removed apartheid but also has created a level of introspection
that has allowed it to question its past activities.
With one voice they now say that the denial of talent through prejudice
or racism won't be tolerated, and the skills of great sportsmen should
be free to rise to the top.
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