Proud parent Neil Bailey, who attended with his son Daniel, was impressed with the offerings: “Daniel's very keen to be in the industry one way or another - it's a great looking place and a very good course and it looks a great set up for continuing the golf progress that he has already started over the last couple of years. I'm not a golfer myself so he hasn't had it forced on him - it's something that he's wanted to do himself and I will be very proud of him when it comes to completing it.”
Dr Paul Wiseman, Executive Director of Education, advised who the PGA training might suit: “A lot of people come onto this programme for many different reasons - don't think it's only for people who want to become the next Rory McIlroy. PGA Professionals do 85 different jobs. Some people are interested in the more technical side of things with sports science or custom fitting, some want to work in the business of golf for companies like PING or Titleist or venues like The Belfry. We've got an average age of about 24-25 so it just shows the mixture of people we get coming on the programme from all different areas.”