"I am a golfer, not an athlete." These are the words from Lee Westwood, a current golf pro, who at one point in his life was ranked as high as the 5th best golfer in the world. Despite what most people think, golf is a game, not a sport. A sport can be a game, but a game doesn 't have to be a sport (Johnson 2). Recently, CNNSI did a poll on whether or not golf is a sport, and the answer was a definitive "No." Golf is a game that can be played by people of all age and sizes, and requires absolutely no athletic ability, which makes it not a sport (Thomas 1).
Golf is a game that requires little to no strategy at all. In other sports, such as basketball, baseball, hockey, or football, strategy is one of the most important …show more content…
Basketball players need to hit a foul shot with thousands of fans screaming at the top of their lungs, and baseball players need to hit a 100-mile per hour fastball with people screaming everywhere around them. Golfers need complete silence in order to make a little putt. Early in 2003, a man 's cell phone rang while Tiger Woods was attempting a putt. His caddy took the phone and threw it into the nearby lake. If this is what golfers do if they hear a cell phone beep, what do you think they would do if they had to deal with what real athletes have to deal with?
Another argument about this subject would be that according to dictionary.com, the Olympic games are "A Pan-Hellenic festival in ancient Greece consisting of athletic games and contests of choral poetry and dance, first celebrated in 776 B.C. and held periodically until A.D. 393 on the plain of Olympia in honor of the Olympian Zeus." The modern Olympic games are the exact same thing, and the key word in the definition is "a festival consisting of athletic games." Oddly enough, golf is not included in the Olympics each year. Obviously, if golf were a sport, it would be included in the Olympics (Van Esch