Youngest ever PGA Master Professional

A golfer who first picked up a golf club at aged just four has become the youngest ever recipient of PGA Master Professional status.

Littlehampton-based Scot Steven Orr, now 40, who is director of coaching and development at the Cranfield Golf Academies, received the accolade in the latest APAL (Accreditation for Professional Achievement and Learning) awards.

Also celebrating were Jussi Pitkanen (Ireland PGA coach education and development manager), Shane Rose (Cold Ashby), Kieron Stevenson (Royal Troon) and Ian Wrigley (Dunham Forest) who achieved PGA Fellow Professional status.

The following were accorded PGA Advanced Professional membership: Stephen Ennis (Balcarrick), Robert Giles (Greenore), Lewis Hanney (Oake Manor), Graham Hawkings (Malvern College), Simon Hayward (Westridge), Mark Norton (Northants County), Mark Sturgess (Bourn Golf) and Scott Thompson (Mendip Spring).

Orr grew up playing golf on the south side of Glasgow at East Renfrewshire Golf Club where he and his older brother, David, who is also a successful PGA pro, were passionate about the game right from the start.

The younger Orr harboured hopes of playing on the European Tour but has ended up as a renowned coach with a host of achievements to his name including being one of the first PGA pros to undertake the UKCC Level 4 Certificate in Coaching.

Ironically, it was a golfer who famously never had a lesson – Bubba Watson – that persuaded Orr that he wasn’t going to cut it as a player at the highest level. Orr played a few rounds with Watson while at university in Alabama and it was a wake-up call to his own tour ambitions.

“From my teens I wanted to be a European Tour player but I promised myself that when the day it became evident it was not going to happen as a tour player that coaching was where I wanted to be,” said Orr. “Playing with Bubba you could see he was a different standard and it was maybe a turning point when I realised there were players far better than me.

“Coaching was beginning to hold a fascination when I put a foot in the coaching world. I went from playing ten hours a day to not playing for a year because I was so absorbed in coaching. I’m totally fascinated with coaching and in fact it’s outgrown my fascination with playing in a way I never thought would happen.”

Orr, who described himself as a decent player who competed on the Europro Tour and made some Challenge Tour appearances, believes his appetite for coaching was fuelled by his playing experiences.

“I think my fascination with coaching grew out of my failure as a player. I was looking from a playing perspective and wanted to understand why,” he added. “I love coaching, I do 70 hours a week but it doesn’t feel as though I’ve worked a day since 2003. My love for coaching grows every day, I’m very fortunate that I have got a job that doesn’t feel like work.”

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A graduate of Cardiff University’s highly respected post-graduate magazine journalism course, Andy has successfully edited four different publications across the B2B, trade and consumer sectors. He is skilled at all aspects of the magazine process in addition to editing websites and managing social media channels.