Accessible golf: Lessons given so pros can teach

Published: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 9:38 p.m. MDT
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For years, Stan Haacke enjoyed golf and played to a 15 handicap when he was struck with bone cancer in his left leg six years ago.

After having a large part of his left hip removed, Haacke couldn't walk normally, with his left leg basically reduced to a weak limb with an inability to support his weight. He figured that, at that point, his golfing days were over.

These days, though, you might see Haacke out on the golf course riding in a cart and hopping over to his ball with the aid of crutches. Once he gets to the ball, he puts his feet close together and it takes him several seconds to set up. His swing is unorthodox, with all of his weight on his right foot. But he makes solid contact and, once the ball is in the air, it looks like your typical golf shot.

The 49-year-old from Bountiful is actually playing the best golf of his life these days with his handicap down to a 12.9. He has more time to play golf and he makes the most of it.

"I can't hit it as far, but my short game is better," said Haacke.

Bob Wassom is a 59-year-old from Salt Lake who broke his neck when he dove head-first into a shallow reservoir at age 22.

He looks able-bodied but, with a fused spine and a fused right ankle, he can't make the proper moves for a golf swing.

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Wassom is constantly on medication and says "everything works, but nothing very well."

But watch his shots on the golf course, and they go straight down the fairway.

Haacke and Wassom are among the many golfers with disabilities who are beneficiaries of Adaptive Open Golf Classes, which are available at Mick Riley Golf Course throughout the summer.

Classes are taught by trained professionals in the Salt Lake County golf system for individuals ages 8 and up with a variety of disabilities. They participate in group or individual lessons and are allowed to bring an assistant or mentor along with them.

Salt Lake is one of five areas of the country where these classes are available, thanks to the National Alliance for Accessible Golf, along with Portland, Ore.; Toledo, Ohio; Hattiesburg, Miss.; and Wilmington, N.C.

Gary Robb and Judy Alvarez, who work for the NAAG, came to Salt Lake's Meadow Brook Golf Course last month to teach a couple of dozen golf pros how to teach golfers with disabilities and show off some of the golfing aids available.

"We've developed a program to integrate people with disabilities into golf," said Robb, who formerly lived in Utah and now lives in Indiana. "The outcome we hope for is inclusion. People with disabilities haven't had that accessibility because they haven't felt welcome and comfortable trying to play golf."

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Tyler Swensen swings from a new one-seater golf cart that allows athletes in wheelchairs to play golf.

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