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<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8702030351
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
870716
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, July 16, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
LOVE OF GOLF TAKES SCOTS FROM CRADLE TO GREEN
</HEADLINE>
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</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
MUIRFIELD, Scotland -- "Maybe you can help me with directions," I said,
unfolding a map as I stepped to the counter. "I'm trying to get to the golf,
the British Open, and I can't seem to . . . "

  I looked up.

  I was talking to a 12-year-old.
  "You . . . don't drive, I take it?"
  "Afreeed noot," he said.
  I have this problem whenever I go to Scotland. Actually, I have three
problems  whenever I go to Scotland. I keep getting in the wrong side of the
car. I keep driving on the wrong side of the road. And I can't understand a
thing they say.
  And here I was again, en route to the  Open in Muirfield, lost, confused,
hitting curbs. I had rented a car at the Edinburgh airport. I had asked for
directions, and the lady had said "goo to the fuurst rooondaboot" and look for
the signs.
  So I went to the first "rooondaboot." I went rooond and aboot. And I was
back in the airport.
  I did this three times. Each time I wound up back in the airport. It was on
my fourth attempt that  I noticed the only slab of business in this otherwise
deserted little loop:
  A driving range. 
  Yes. The Port Royal Golf Range. I am not making this up. Right there. Maybe
1,000 yards from the  airport. I knew golf was big here. But I figured they
could wait until they got home.
  Anyhow, I pulled in for directions. Which is how I wound up with this
Scottish Little Archie; red hair, freckles,  thin and that accent. He said his
name was Grant.
  "You run this place, Grant?" I asked. 
  "Me father doos," he said, laughing.  "Do you golf?" 
  "Aye."
  "You have your own clubs?" 
  "Aye."
  "When did you get them?"
  "Two years agoo," he said.
  "Two years ago? How old were you? Ten?"
  "Aye."
Here, the game is child's play 
  Now, forgive me. Where I come from, you  don't have your own golf clubs
when you are 10. You don't even touch a golf club when you are 10, because the
only golf clubs around are your father's, and if you touch those you hang in
the closet by  your ankles for a year. Golf, where I come from, is not a
child's game. Unless it's the kind where you hit the ball through the little
windmill.
  "What's your handicap?" I asked, joking.
  "Sixteen,"  he said, serious.
  "And you play, like, all 18 holes?" I just couldn't see this little kid
teeing off, choosing a driver, studying a putt.
  Just then the door opened. In walked two more kids. One  of them was chubby
with apple cheeks, the other thin, wearing a Los Angeles Raiders sweatshirt.
Ah, I thought. Normalcy. 
  "Where's dee Putulssomby golf?" the chubby kid asked. Or something like
that. It was then that I noticed the second kid was lugging a bag of clubs,
with little red fuzzy things on the club heads.
  "Go dune de rood," Grant instructed, "go rayt den leeft den rayt . . ." Out
they  went, presumably with a tee time.
  "More golfers?" I asked, once they'd gone.
  "Aye," he said.
Recess is tee time 
  I felt like I'd walked into Saturday morning television. I could see these
kids walking to school, books under one arm, 5- iron under the other.
  "You wooont to hit a few?" Grant said.
  What the heck? I wasn't getting any closer to Muirfield. We walked outside.
The sky  was gray, the grass thick and wet. Plane engines roared overhead. I
stood at the tee and stared at the yard markers, 100, 150, 200. Above them,
you saw "EDINBURGH AIRPORT" on the side of a hangar.
  "Goo aheeed," said Grant.
  Just then I remembered how I play golf. You know how there are bad golfers,
horrible golfers and the absolutely laughable golfers?
  Yeah. Well. The last group? I carry  their clubs.
  But now I had a 12-year-old watching me. He scratched his chin. I drew back
the driver like a sword and brought it down.
  The ball dribbled off and died.
  "Well, I gotta get  going . . . " I said.
  And so I did. I got in that car -- on my second try -- and banged against
curbs on the wrong side of the road until I found my way here. And when I
arrived, everyone was talking  about the Open, which begins today, about its
tradition, its history, and Scotland's love for golf.
  What more need be said? You want to learn about the heartbeat of a sport?
Start with the children.  Check the schoolyard. Check the sandlots. Check the
airport.
  As I drove off from the Port Royal Golf Range, I noticed Grant had taken
over my tee. I watched him in my rear view mirror. His swing  was true. The
club head whammed across. The ball rose like a tiny jet, high and strong into
the friendly skies.
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COLUMN
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