Golf Saskatchewan (previously known as the Saskatchewan Golf Association) is the provincial amateur governing body for the sport of golf in the province of Saskatchewan. The organization is a member of Golf Canada, the national sport governing body. [1] Golf Saskatchewan is overseen by an elected board of directors from across Saskatchewan.
Sport | Golf |
---|---|
Abbreviation | GS |
Founded | 1913 |
Affiliation | Golf Canada |
Headquarters | Saskatoon, Sask. |
The Saskatchewan Golf Association came to its current structure on April 12, 1999 when it was officially incorporated for business through the amalgamation of the previous Saskatchewan Golf Association (SGA), an all-male organization, and the Canadian Ladies Golf Association (CLGA) Saskatchewan Branch, an all-female organization. The SGA was formed in 1913. [2] Meanwhile, the CLGA Saskatchewan Branch was officially formed in 1926. [3]
Each year, Golf Saskatchewan holds nine provincial championship events at predetermined locations across the province. The tournaments conducted on an annual basis are:
Years | President | Past President |
---|---|---|
2019 | Delbert Betnar | Kyle Mulligan |
2018 | Delbert Betnar | Kyle Mulligan |
2017 | Kyle Mulligan | Richard Smith |
2016 | Kyle Mulligan | Richard Smith |
2015 | Richard Smith | Moe Martin |
2014 | Richard Smith | Moe Martin |
2013 | Moe Martin | Dave Forster |
2012 | Moe Marin | Dave Forster |
2011 | Dave Forster | Byron Harvie |
2010 | Byron Harvie | Randy Stefan |
2009 | Byron Harvie | Randy Stefan |
2008 | Randy Stefan | Cathy Bildfell |
2007 | Randy Stefan | Cathy Bildfell |
2006 | Cathy Bildfell | Michael Smith |
2005 | Michael Smith | Melodie Lawrek |
2004 | Michael Smith | Melodie Lawrek |
2003 | Melodie Lawrek | Lynne Lacroix |
2002 | Lynne Lacroix | Daryl Bitz |
2001 | Daryl Bitz | Dick DeRyk |
2000 | Dick DeRyk | Con Hammer |
1999 | Dick DeRyk | Con Hammer |
Year | Saskatchewan Ladies Golf Association | Saskatchewan Golf Association |
1998 | Pat Buglass | Con Hammer |
1997 | Catherine Paton | Con Hammer |
1996 | Catherine Paton | Bill Klein |
1995 | Wenda Coley | Bill Klein |
1994 | Wenda Coley | Terry Meier |
1993 | Birdie Prosofsky | Terry Meier |
1992 | Birdie Prosofsky | Bill McRae |
1991 | Shirley Besse | Ted Wharington |
1990 | Janice Courtice | Ted Wharington |
1989 | Janice Courtice | Bill Wallace |
1988 | Wilda Schab | Bill Wallace |
1987 | Wilda Schab | Bill Taylor |
1986 | Jean Humbert | Bill Taylor |
1985 | Jean Humbert | Bill Taylor |
1984 | Jean Johnstone | Jack Eisner |
1983 | Jean Johnstone | Bob Elmore |
1982 | Joyce Dagorne | Jim Stothers |
1981 | Joyce Dagorne | Jim Stothers |
1980 | Pat Baker | Lloyd Scaddan |
1979 | Pat Baker | Lloyd Scaddan |
1978 | Ida Shepherd | Jack Williamson |
1977 | Ida Shepherd | Ray Marsh |
1976 | Eleanor Reid | Ray Marsh |
1975 | Eleanor Reid | Al Young |
1974 | Eleanor Van Impe | Al Young |
1973 | Eleanor Van Impe | Keith Rever |
1972 | Vi Heywood | Keith Rever |
1971 | Vi Heywood | Jack Miller |
1970 | Marguerite Slack | Jack Miller |
1969 | Marguerite Slack | Jack Tait |
1968 | Irene Mackenzie | Ross Reibling |
1967 | Irene Mackenzie | Jules Swick |
1966 | Esther Medhurst | Gerry Welsh |
1965 | Louise Jones | Bob Thomson |
1964 | Marguerite Slack | Alec Bland |
1963 | Dorothy Donally | Jack D. Heywood |
1962 | Kay McNamee | Bob Stovin |
1961 | Willa Haughton | William (Bill) Kemp |
1960 | Margaret Walker | Harry Slack |
1959 | Alice Elder | Wayne Winkler |
1958 | Phyllis Trotter | Del Wilson |
1957 | Mae Balmos | Blair Nelson |
1956 | Jesse McBain | Hugh P. Thomson |
1955 | Mary Hunt | Dr. Robert Reid |
1954 | Gladys Rideout | Glenn Richardson |
1953 | Rene Speers | Dr. Jack Leddy |
1952 | Wally Bushe | Gordon A. Beattie |
1951 | Scotty Johnstone | Herb Kilburn |
1950 | Edna Andrews | Herb Kilburn |
1949 | Marguerite Slack | Dr. Ben Reid |
1948 | Phyllis Trotter | Dr. Ben Reid |
1947 | Ede Boyle | N. C. (Newt) Byers |
1946 | Peggy Robb | N. C. (Newt) Byers |
1945 | ||
1944 | ||
1943 | ||
1942 | T.D. Gleave | N. C. (Newt) Byers |
1941 | R.R. Watts | J. H. Warren |
1940 | Gladys Rideout | S.D. (Sam) Boylan |
1939 | W. Knight Wilson | George Holden |
1938 | Amy Holroyde | Dr. George Bigelow |
1937 | T.B. Gibson | Frank Harris |
1936 | Virginia Brown | Clement Alexander |
1935 | W. Cameron/Agnes Rorison | John Know |
1934 | Eva Weir/Clara Campbell | A.D. Taylor |
1933 | W.J. Wrye | N. C. (Newt) Byers |
1932 | J.H.S. Garrett/Agnes Rorison | J. Russell Smith |
1931 | Myrtle Creighton | J.D. Gunn |
1930 | H. Middlemas | T. Tellison |
1929 | R.R. Morgan/F.R. Nason | W.H.A. Hill |
1928 | Gladys Rideout | W. Ritchie |
1927 | Gladys Rideout | Dr. H.L. Jacques |
1926 | Robert (Bob) Charlton | |
1925 | Frank Miley | |
1924 | Frank Miley | |
1923 | Lorne Johnson | |
1922 | B.M. Wakeling | |
1921 | James Smith | |
1920 | N. C. (Newt) Byers | |
1919 | J.D. (Jack) Turnbull | |
1918 | Harold C. Pope | |
1917 | A.F. Angus | |
1916 | W. (Bill) Laidlaw | |
1915 | James Balfour | |
1914 | James Balfour | |
1913 | James Balfour |
The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews is the oldest and most prestigious golf club in the world. It is based in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland, United Kingdom and is regarded as the worldwide "Home of Golf". Formerly, it was also one of the governing authorities of the game, but in 2004 this role was handed over to a newly formed group of companies, collectively known as The R&A.
Hockey Canada, which merged with the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association in 1994, is the national governing body of ice hockey and ice sledge hockey in Canada and is a member of the International Ice Hockey Federation. Hockey Canada controls a majority of ice hockey in Canada. There are some notable exceptions, such as the Canadian Hockey League and U Sports who are partnered with Hockey Canada, but are not members, as well as any of Canada's professional hockey clubs. Hockey Canada is based in Calgary, with a secondary office in Ottawa, Ontario and regional centres in Toronto, Winnipeg and Montreal.
Football Canada is the governing body for amateur Canadian football. It is Canada's representative member of the International Federation of American Football (IFAF), the world's governing body for American football, although it focuses primarily its own Canadian form of the game. Football Canada is headquartered in Ottawa, Ontario.
The Royal Canadian Golf Association (RCGA), branded as Golf Canada, is the governing body of golf in Canada.
Sports in Canada consist of a wide variety of games. The most common sports are ice hockey, lacrosse, gridiron football, soccer, basketball, curling and baseball, with ice hockey and lacrosse being the official winter and summer sports, respectively.
Marlene Stewart Streit, is a Canadian amateur golfer, and a member of the World Golf Hall of Fame.
England Golf is the governing body for male and female amateur golf in England. It represents over 1,900 golf clubs with over 740,000 members and is affiliated to The R&A, the joint global governing body of golf. It was formed in 2012 as a merger between the English Golf Union, the governing body for men, and the English Women's Golf Association, the equivalent body for women. England Golf is a member of Council of National Golf Unions (CONGU).
Hockey Manitoba is the governing body of amateur ice hockey in the province of Manitoba, Canada. Hockey Manitoba was founded in 1914 as the Manitoba Amateur Hockey Association and is a branch affiliate of Hockey Canada.
The Saskatoon Hilltops are a junior Canadian football team based in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. The Hilltops play in the six-team Prairie Football Conference, which is part of the Canadian Junior Football League (CJFL) and compete annually for the Canadian Bowl. The team was founded in 1921 as a senior team in the Saskatchewan Rugby Football Union, which it played in until 1936. Two years after WWII the team reorganized in 1947. Beginning in 1953, the Hilltops have won 22 Canadian Bowl championships. The Hilltops have won six consecutive Canadian Bowls, having done so between 2014 and 2019.
Darren William Veitch is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey player whose career was beset by injuries. He played 511 career NHL games for the Washington Capitals, Detroit Red Wings and Toronto Maple Leafs, and was once named The Hockey News's "Comeback Player of the Year" after badly injuring his arm falling through a glass coffee table after slipping at home on one of his children's toys. He was often unfairly compared to Paul Coffey, a fellow defenceman selected immediately after him in the 1980 NHL Entry Draft. He played his last NHL game in 1991 and bounced around the minor leagues before finally retiring in 1999, and now enjoys recreational roller hockey at the Castle Sports Club in Phoenix, AZ.
Saskatchewan Soccer Association (SSA) is the governing body for soccer in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. The association was formed in 1905.
Sport in Saskatchewan includes ice skating, speed skating, curling, curling bonspiels, snowboarding, snow golf, broomball, ice hockey, badminton, and curling. Summer sports abound: among these are school track and field days, community rodeos, golf tournaments, and sporting events such as baseball, softball, and snowmobile, snowmobile rallies. School teams usually feature baseball, basketball, field hockey, Association football or soccer, lacrosse, football, rugby, and wrestling. Popular individual sports include auto racing, boxing, cycling, golf, hiking, horse racing, ice skating, skateboarding, skiing, swimming, tennis, triathlon, track and field, and water sports. Other sports include tobogganing, sailing, rowing, trap shooting, lawn bowling, and horseshoe. Saskatchewan speed skaters have enjoyed recent success in the Olympics in Salt Lake City and Turin. The Saskatchewan Olympic medalists include Catriona Le May Doan, Jason Parker and Justin Warsylewicz.
The Saskatchewan Open was a golf tournament on PGA Tour Canada that was held in Saskatchewan, Canada.
Shooting sports in Canada are practised in various ways across the country. Canadians enjoy the sports at recreational and competitive levels, including international and at the Olympic level. Each province has its own organizations that govern the various disciplines. Many of the disciplines are connected nationally and some are part of larger international organizations.
The Jubilee Trophy is the Canadian national championship for women's amateur soccer teams, first held in 1987. It is held concurrently to the national men's amateur Challenge Trophy.
The Pacific Northwest Golf Association (PNGA) was established on February 4, 1899 and serves as a golf governing body that conducts championships and promotes golf activities to golfers located in the Pacific Northwest region of North America. The territory of the PNGA is divided into five different zones, made up of about 175,000 members and 650 golf courses.
Water Polo Canada, officially the Canadian Water Polo Association Inc., is the governing body of the sport of water polo in Canada and is a member of the Fédération Internationale de Natation (FINA). Water Polo Canada controls all water polo in the country and is responsible for hosting national championships and fielding national teams. The organization has its headquarters in Ottawa while its men's national team is based in Calgary and its women's national team is based in Montreal.
Curlsask, formerly known as the Saskatchewan Curling Association, is the regional governing body for the sport of curling in Saskatchewan. It was founded in 1904.
John Welch Hamilton was a Canadian sports executive. He served as president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA) from 1930 to 1932, president of the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada from 1936 to 1938, and was a member of the Canadian Olympic Committee for 17 years. His leadership of the CAHA and the AAU of C coincided with efforts to maintain amateurism and combat growing professionalism in sport. He appointed a committee to establish better relations between the CAHA and professional leagues, and praised the players and teams for quality hockey and growth of the amateur game in Canada despite the competition. He favoured professionals in one sport playing as amateurs in another, and took charge of the AAU of C at a time when the CAHA, the Canadian Amateur Basketball Association, and the Canadian Amateur Lacrosse Association challenged the definition of amateur, and later broke away from the AAU of C which wanted to hold onto purist ideals of amateurism.