New IGU Governing Council under Brijinder Singh plans to develop excellence centre

Ranvir Singh

New Delhi : The Annual General Meeting (AGM) and elections of the Indian Golf Union was conducted successfully under the observation of Returning Officer Justice (Retd) Rameshwar Singh Malik in New Delhi on December 15. The new Governing Council led by Brijinder Singh, who was re-elected as President of the Indian Golf Union (IGU) for a second two-year term (2024-2026) on Sunday, plans to continue the good work started back in 2022.
Brijinder Singh is confident that IGU will bring more talented amateurs to the system with consistent efforts and creation of an excellence centre. “We feel the good results of the Indian amateurs recently is because of the National Squad system we started, where we bring in mind trainers, nutritionists, physiotherapists etc. We gave the amateurs specialised training with the latest equipment and I am sure that is also helping. But moreover we created a conducive environment where the kids know that their future is secure. We will look towards making a more robust training system. We are trying to create an excellence centre and this is not just going to be a spurt. The good performances will continue and we will bring more good players into the system.”
Talking about the State Golf Associations (SGAs) controlled by the Army, he said: “The case of State Golf Associations (SGAs) housed in Army cantonments should have been looked into earlier. We would like to handhold them and make them compliant. In case they don’t get compliant we will have to look for other alternatives. But we don’t want to disrupt our functioning SGAs. Our first objective will be to make the Army SGAs compliant and make them part of the system.”
After re-elected as the secretary, SK Sharma said that the Indian Open, flagship event of the IGU, has seen an unprecented rise in prize money in the last two years. Backed by Hero MotoCorp, the title sponsors, the Indian Open’s prize purse has swelled from $2 million to $2.25 million. We are doing the event in DLF in the coming year and plan to shift it to other locations in India as well as it is the Indian Open. In fact, we visited a few venues to see the feasibility but it was last minute for Hero so next year we will definitely look at taking it to other venue as well and make it much larger ,” IGU honorary secretary SK Sharma said.
The financial health of IGU also got better with the overall revenue increasing from Rs 12 crore in 2021-22 to Rs 24.5 crore in 2023-24, courtesy austerity measures and cost cutting on unnecessary expenses, he added.
Earlier during the AGM, elections for IGU’s office-bearers and Governing Council for the term 2024-2026 were elected unopposed since the number of candidates matched the number of available positions.
The following office-bearers were elected including President: Mr. Brijinder Singh, Honorary Secretary Mr. S.K. Sharma, Honorary Treasurer, Mr. Sanjiv Rattan. Additionally, the nine members elected to the Governing Council are Farzan R Heerjee (Jharkhand), Harpuneet Singh Sandhu (Chandigarh), Harish Kumar (Uttarakhand), Nagesh Singh (Assam), Dr Param Navdeep Singh (Rajasthan), Sameer Sinha (Gujarat), Shashank Sandu (Maharashtra), Simarjeet Singh (Uttar Pradesh) and Viren Singh Ghumman (Punjab).
The meeting commenced once the quorum was achieved. Key agenda items included, approval of the minutes of the last AGM, Adoption of the Annual Report, Appointment of auditors, Approval of the accounts for the financial year 2023-2024.
This includes introducing the National Squad System, strengthening the partnerships with R&A (world rules governing body) and Asia-Pacific Golf Confederation (APGC), enhancing the National Golf Academy of India (NGAI), making rogue State Golf Associations (SGAs) compliant under IGU byelaws and creation of an excellence centre that builds bench strength of talented golfers.
“The main work of the new team is to carry forward the good work we have done in the last few years. They are good golfers, most of them have been part of the Governing Council with me previously as well. We are very clear on our growth path and we will continue to work in that direction,” Brijinder Singh said in a statement.
In the last couple of years, Indian amateurs have scripted some significant milestones and created history as well in golf. Avani Prashanth went on to end India’s 43-year-old individual title drought in the Queen Sirikit Cup last year. 14-year-old Kartik Singh, also inducted in the Target Olympic Podium Scheme (TOPS) under the Sports Ministry achieved a top-10 finish in the Nomura Cup, a feat completed after 9 years since Aman Raj’s individual fifth-place result in 2015 Abu Dhabi. Kartik also won the Singapore Junior Championship this year. Aditi Ashok became India’s first female golfer to earn an Asian Games medal, when she clinched a silver medal at Hangzhou 2022.
“We have not curtailed good expenditure but removed bad expenditure. Over the previous years, we have started offering lunches to amateurs for all four days of the tournament. There were certain over-spending happening like FDs at low interest rates all that is being closely monitored. Our balance sheet which was Rs 12 crore two years back has swelled to Rs 24.5 crore now and is likely to go up even more as the game progresses,” IGU honorary treasurer Sanjiv Rattan said.

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