Facebook Pixel From caddie lines to centre stage | Financial Express Pune - newspaper - Read this story on Magzter.com

Try GOLD - Free

From caddie lines to centre stage

Financial Express Pune

|

January 18, 2026

BEFOREANYONE STARTS pulling out record books and world rankings, let me say this upfront.

- Rahil Gangjee

India has produced golfers who have achieved far more on the global stage than thenames I am about to talk about. This is not a list of our most decorated champions. This is not about who won the most on the European Tour or who cracked the highest world ranking. This is about something else altogether. This is about the men who came from nothing, who learned the game while carrying bags, collecting balls, cutting grass and borrowing clubs, and who quietly built the foundation of professional golf in this country. The ones who turned “rags to riches” from a cliché into a lived reality. The ones who made it possible for later generations to dream of golf as a profession.

These are the unsung heroes. The domes-tickings. The pioneers who didn’t just play the game in India — they created the ecosystem for it. Chronologically, the story begins with three towering figures: Rohtas Singh, fondly called Guruji; Basad Ali, the artist of the short game; and Ali Sher, the man who broke a psychological barrier by winning the Indian Open as a professional. Their stories deserve to be told before we even get to the more familiar modern names.

Rohtas Singh - Guruji, the original torchbearer

Rohtas Singh was not just a golfer. He was an institution. Long before corporate-backed academies, long before structured junior programmes, long before fitness trainers and launch monitors, there was Guruji — winning, teaching, inspiring and carrying Indian golf on his shoulders. He came from humble beginnings, learned the game the hard way, and went on to dominate the domestic circuit for decades. He won an astonishing number of tournaments across India at a time when travel itself was a luxury and equipment was often borrowed or outdated.

MORE STORIES FROM Financial Express Pune

Financial Express Pune

New Iran leader's Strait talk: Won't back down

MOJTABA VOWS VENGEANCE IN FIRST REMARKS SINCE TAKING OVER

time to read

1 mins

March 13, 2026

Financial Express Pune

India-bound crude sneaks past Hormuz

New Delhi in talks with Tehran for safe sea passage of oil tankers

time to read

2 mins

March 13, 2026

Financial Express Pune

Skyroot sets its sights on data centres in space

Co-founder says Vikram-1 rocket launch very close

time to read

1 mins

March 13, 2026

Financial Express Pune

Founder in the cockpit, again

CONFLICT-HIT AIR ROUTES, A BRUISING REGULATORY PENALTY AND RISING COMPETITION PUT INDIGO'S FOUNDER UNDER THE SHARPEST SCRUTINY YET

time to read

3 mins

March 13, 2026

Financial Express Pune

NSE appoints 20 merchant bankers for public issue

THE NATIONAL STOCK Exchange (NSE) has appointed key intermediaries for its much-awaited initial public offering (IPO), including 20 merchant banks and eight law firms.

time to read

1 min

March 13, 2026

Financial Express Pune

Iranian strike sets tankers ablaze near Iraq

MARITIME STRIKES MOUNT DESPITE TRUMP CLAIM OF VICTORY IN TWO-WEEK WAR

time to read

1 mins

March 13, 2026

Financial Express Pune

HCLTech offers work from home for Chennai staff

HCL TECHNOLOGIES, THE country’s third-largest IT services company, has asked employees in Chennai to work from home on Thursday and Friday asa shortage of commercial LPG disrupts cooking operations across the city — affecting corporate cafeterias, hotel kitchens, hostels and PG accommodations.

time to read

1 min

March 13, 2026

Financial Express Pune

Why sovereign wealth funds' money is critical for India

Sovereign wealth funds (SWF) from Gulf countries may reassess their global investments if the Iran war continues for long. India's technology and infrastructure sectors have been prime destinations for such funds. V Shunmugam explains how SWFs identify and seek value and what India can do to continue attracting these funds

time to read

2 mins

March 13, 2026

Financial Express Pune

Food inflation edges up to 3.47%

Retail inflation rises to 3.21% in February

time to read

1 min

March 13, 2026

Financial Express Pune

For AI adoption, behaviour shift has to happen first

Fintech major Razorpay is offering businesses AI agents that can recover abandoned carts as well as respond to payment disputes, with the launch of what it calls the world’s first AI-native Agent Studio for payments at its flagship event FTX26 in Bengaluru on Thursday. These agents have been built for specific tasks, using Anthropic’s Claude Agent SDK, according to the company. In an interview with Anees Hussain, Co-founder and Managing Director Shashank Kumar speaks about the company’s AI-first pivot, why small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) will be the primary target, the global expansion road map, and where things stand on a potential IPO. Excerpts:

time to read

2 mins

March 13, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size