3 minute read

Post Game

PRESENTED BY

Michelob ULTRA

Understanding golf’s ‘sandwich generation’ is a lesson in stress relief

BY DAVID LORENTZ NATIONAL GOLF FOUNDATION

It’s a bittersweet thing‚ giving up my status among the highly-dynamic, ever-evolving, often-vilified 18- to 34-year-old cohort. For the first time in my 10- year career at NGF, I’m no longer the self-proclaimed spokesperson for the “young crowd.” That torch has been passed.

Now, as I leave behind provisional adulthood and settle into this more refined life stage full of rapid personal development and major life transitions (I just got married), I find myself curious to understand my new peer group — the mostly-overlooked 35- to 49-yearolds. What makes us different? As golfers, how do our needs and behaviors contrast with other groups?

Turns out there are some interesting distinctions. Including foundationally — our motivations for playing golf skew differently than our younger and older counterparts. The biggest differentiator? For us, golf is a means to recover from stress and recharge the mental battery.

That stress relief is a key driver for our group should make sense. This is a time in life when individuals assume the greatest number of social roles — worker, spouse or partner, parent, adult child — and must divide time and energy across these roles. Many of us are also part of what demographers call the “sandwich generation,” faced with the added time and financial pressures of raising young children and caring for aging parents. And of course, these tend to be the most demanding years of a person’s career, too. Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) shows that people between the ages of 30 and 45 had the greatest increase in resignation rates between 2020 and 2021.

You’ll believe then that golfers in my age group who are playing less golf these days — roughly one in four of us — most commonly rationalize that we have neither the time nor money to participate in the way or at the level we’d prefer. This is different from other groups. The 18- to 34-year-olds are more likely to suggest they’ve throttled down because of finding other activities, while the 50-and-older crowd is slowed more by injury and the inability to find regular playing partners.

You’ll believe too that 35- to 49-year-olds are the most likely cohort to have played a solo round of golf over the past 12 months. More than 60 percent of us have, compared to 46 percent of all other golfers. This seems like a natural byproduct of the stress and time deficiency — you play whenever you can, even if you have to go alone. Or you go alone anyway. Golf is certainly a social experience, but sometimes it’s a needed escape from the daily grind and other people.

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