Dylan Baines playing a shot at Celtic Manor Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Dylan Baines has one victory to his name on golf’s EDGA Tour

England’s Lucy Leatham is making her G4D Open debut this week, only three years after a road accident which led to her right arm being amputated and left her with a brain injury.

“I think I had a one per cent chance [of suriving] for two or three weeks, then I was in a coma for six weeks,” says Leatham.

The 37-year-old has long been involved in golf, having originally set out to become a PGA professional and then had a spell as a club fitter.

Leatham hails from Devon, but returns to Celtic Manor having previously worked at the Newport venue’s Twenty Ten course, which was built for the Ryder Cup.

“I have lost my right arm so I have to do everything with my left,” she says. “I just keep thinking I’ll get better the more I play.”

Lucy Leatham plays a drive Image source, EDGA
Image caption,

Lucy Leatham’s right arm was amputated when she was 34

‘An opportunity to show what golfers with a disability can do’

The G4D Open is in Wales for the first time – and will be played at Celtic Manor for two more years – after the first three editions of the tournament took place at Woburn.

It will take place on the Roman Road course, with 80 golfers – some amateur, some professional – from 25 different countries involved in what is disability golf’s equivalent of a major.

There are nine different sports classes for various impairment groups, with players competing to win their respective classes.

There will also be overall men’s and women’s winners of the championship, which is contested over three days and 54 holes of gross stroke play.

Ireland’s Brendan Lawlor and Daphne van Houten, from the Netherlands, will aim to defend their titles this week, with England’s world number one Kipp Popert among the others expected to challenge.

The G4D Open is run by the R&A and DP World Tour and supported by EDGA, which was formerly known as the European Disabled Golf Association.

“We see this as the pinnacle of golf for the disabled,” says the R&A’s Kevin Barker.

“We want golf to be truly reflective of society. Whether it’s your sex, your gender, ethnicity, whether you are able-bodied or disabled, we want people to think golf is a game for them.

“This is a real showpiece opportunity for us to show what golfers with a disability can do.”

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  • Disability Sport
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