An innovative new device that can improve access to golf for those with medical conditions impacting hand functionality is soon to be launched, thanks to a growing collaboration between EDGA and prosthetics expert Koalaa as seen at The G4D Open this week.
Two prototypes were trialled on the eve of the third edition of The G4D Open at Woburn; a Championship featuring 80 G4D (golf for the disabled) players from 20 countries and staged by The R&A in partnership with the DP World Tour, supported by EDGA.
The devices being trialled are only prototypes and will need further testing, working with the relevant authorities. These devices can only be used in competitions where the person has a medical reason to use the equipment and the Committee decides that its use does not give the player any unfair advantage over other players.
Koalaa is a UK-based prosthetics innovator that has a track record in developing tools that aid independence and participation in sports and other activities. In 2024, EDGA collaborated with Koalaa to develop a prosthetic that was tested by children with limb differences, including at The G4D Open. The positive experience of the children led to developing the tool further to enable more individuals to benefit from this groundbreaking work.
This year, in the second phase of the partnership, EDGA and Koalaa have developed a unique hand tool to help players with varying arthritic conditions – something that could aid the retention of players currently in danger of being lost to the game, while opening up opportunities for both new and returning golfers.
The new tool is strapped to the hand and attaches to a connecting device placed on the existing grip of the club. For players, it can aid improved connection, feedback, increased hand-strength and subsequent swing speed. The golf tool also protects the hand from pain and further injury.
On Woburn’s practice range, Martin Lindquist, 68, from North Wales, was fitted with the device by PGA professional coach and EDGA’s Head of Instruction and Education, Mark Taylor. Martin, who has played golf since he was 12 and in recent years played golf three times a week, first felt the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis aged 50. After many years of pain and two surgeries on his right hand, he hadn’t played at all for seven months and had all but given up on golf.