GOLF: WOMEN OF THE GREEN
I hit my first golf balls when I was nine years old in Kharian but that was it,” says Sarah Mahmood, a senior golfer from Lahore. “Coming from a family of golfers, it may seem strange to you that I was never encouraged to play golf. I did play a bit when I was 16 but then I was threatened by my mother of dire consequences if I failed in my exams.
“My mother had found my report cards, which I had hidden from her under my mattress,” she laughs. “I only started playing again a few years back when my son became interested in the game and started playing himself. I have won several local championships but not the nationals. I play for fun,” she says.
Tehmina Ali, also from Lahore, and daughter of former national champion Yasmin Mubarak Ali says that she only started playing at 18. “I was studying at the Convent of Jesus and Mary in Murree and golf was out of the question until I was through with my senior Cambridge exams,” she says.
Although internationally a number of women golfers are beginning to make their mark and develop a following, in Pakistan golf is generally still considered a male preserve. But the sport is slowly catching on among women as well
Tehmina says that Sarah used to play golf with her mother “but we also became very good friends. She would coax me while playing to study and carry on with my education. It is thanks to her that I became a lawyer,” she says.
Meanwhile, Tehmina’s mother, the legendary Yasmin Mubarak Ali who is now settled in Islamabad, started playing golf at 13 and has won almost every golf tournament played in Pakistan, with several wins abroad as well.