By
George Peper
Very seldom do I stray from my beloved St. Andrews nest to other parts of
Scotland, but when I do, I invariably discover something interesting—or
odd.Case in point, a recent lost weekend in the Highlands wherein I took a
counterclockwise route that included stops at the Trump property near Aberdeen
(a truly spectacular site, and my bet is the Donald will make it happen); Castle
Stuart, emerging on the Moray Firth via Kingsbarns co-designer Mark Parsinen
(and it may just top Kingsbarns); and Spey Valley, a challenging new charmer
from Dave Thomas, just north of Aviemore.
It was after my game at Spey
Valley, while wending southward through the quaint villages of Speyside, that I
experienced my moment of revelation, in the town of Kingussie (pronounced
king-yoo-say). Nestled at the foot of the majestic Cairngorms, Kingussie is a
village of roughly 1,500 inhabitants yet, like so many tiny Scottish towns, it
has its own golf course, designed in 1908 by none other than Harry Vardon. I had
heard good things about it, so when I saw the modest “Golf Course” sign at a
corner in the center of town, I took the right turn.
The course was just a
couple of blocks away, but those blocks were steeply uphill, some three or four
hundred feet. I wasn’t sure what to expect, but nothing could have prepared me
for the sight I beheld as I approached the club. There was no gate, no circular
driveway, no porte cochere, no entrance of any kind. What greeted me instead was
a trailer park—nearly one hundred campers, caravans, and mobile homes of every
size and budget assembled smack on the clubhouse steps.
“The relic of
a rather difficult period in our history,” said club secretary Ian Chadburn, a
touch of wistfulness in his brogue. “Following World War II, the club was
financially strapped and in order to make ends meet, the board voted to make the
land available to the holidaymakers.”
But Winnebago-world, arresting as it
was, was not the most striking aspect about Kingussie Golf Club; it was the
members. While nursing a pint of Belhaven Best on the club’s very pleasant
veranda, I watched the busy 1st tee as several groups teed off—27 players in
all.
Of those 27 players, no fewer than 13 struck the ball
left-handed! Now, my understanding always has been that less than 10 percent
of the world’s golfers were southpaws—and here I had seen a parade with a near
50–50 ratio. Moreover, two more blokes were on the putting green, slapping
happily from the wrong side of the ball. What was going on here?
“Ah, you’re
in the left-handed golf capital of the world,” said Chadburn.
“And why is
that?” I asked.
“One word,” he said. “Shinty.”
Suddenly a distant bell
rang. Yes indeed, I had heard somewhere about this phenomenon, this perverse
pocket of port-sidedness.
It seems that just over 100 years ago, the
Kingussie locals brought organized form to a game that had been played in an
unregulated way for several centuries, a game that has often been touted—along
with the likes of kolf, kolven, pall mall, chole, paganica, chuigan and assorted
others from nations near and far, as the true and only precursor to golf.
“Yes,” said Chadburn, “this is the birthplace of shinty—it’s only played
here in the Highlands and in a few towns to the west and south. But Kingussie is
by far the best team.”
That was an understatement. The Kingussie club is not
only the most
dominant team in shinty, it is—according to the Guinness Book of
World
Records—the most dominant team in the history of sports, having won 20
consecutive league titles while at one point going unbeaten for four
straight
years. Their stalwart is a fellow named Ronald Ross. The Tiger
Woods of shinty,
Ross scored 94 goals during the 2003 season, more than
the combined team totals
of Kingussie’s two closest rivals.
“I
think there’s a game this afternoon,”
said one of the putting lefties.
“You should stop by and see Ronaldo in
action.”
Sure enough, the
Kingussie lads were scheduled to take on a team
from Fort William in
one of the major events on the shinty calendar, the
Scottish Hydro
Electric Camanachd Cup quarterfinal. (Camanachd is Gaelic for
shinty.)
An hour later I was in the crowd, brimming with
cluelessness.
What I beheld was a sort of sports platypus.
Shinty is played by two
teams of large men who run up and down a football field
using hockey
sticks to hit a baseball into a soccer net. A match lasts 90
minutes,
involves 24 players and looks like lacrosse on steroids.
I saw the
golf connection immediately. Most players gripped their sticks, known
as camans,
cross-handed, swatting both forehands and backhands. The
curved-face camans
seemed to be extremely versatile weapons, capable of
hitting the ball off the
ground (there were some very impressive tee
shots) as well as in mid-flight (a
couple of guys had the timing of
A-Rod). On several occasions, players also were
able to “catch” the
ball, stopping it dead on the face of the stick.
Kicking
the
ball is permitted, as is high-sticking, and most of these manly men do not
wear helmets or pads, except at the knees. (It’s no wonder shinty was a
big hit
back in 1300 with the Braveheart crowd.) That said, the
official rules of shinty
run a hefty 48 pages, including a seven-point
anti-doping policy. In fact, the
game I saw involved few penalties and
disputes. A tacit code of ethics seems to
prevail among the shintymen.
It’s as if they know their game is an endangered
species that needs to
be preserved and protected if it is to survive to the next
generation.
The whole brutal ballet was fascinating to watch, and legendary
Ronald Ross lived up to his clippings, scoring five goals to lead
Kingussie to a
6–0 victory. My only regret was that in opting for
shinty, I had missed the
chance to play the Kingussie course. But no
worries, I’ll be back.
The next
time I head for the Highlands
I’ll make Kingussie my first stop while taking the
clockwise
route—north, then east, then south. Or I guess I should call it the
left-handed route.
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