Mini Masters
Most international sporting fixtures have a frisson of cosmopolitan glamour. Yet what happens when Europe’s minigolf enthusiasts meet in Tampere, Finland? Matt Barr reports. Photography by Alexander Short
Monaco has its Grand Prix, Pamplona has the running of
the bulls – hell, even little old Cowes on the Isle of
Wight is world famous for its regatta. And Tampere in
Finland? Well, Tampere has the European Minigolf
Nations Cup. But while you’d be forgiven for thinking
that this event might lack the cachet of a beautiful-peopled Monaco say,
or a Hemingway-era Pamplona, the Nations Cup is actually sporting
dynamite – albeit with a slow-burning fuse.
My introduction into the tribal (and, very occasionally, nationalist) world of international minigolf comes at the invitation of UK team member Richard “Squire” Gottfried. Richard is also the team media liaison officer, and a week before the event he tries to give me a feel for things by talking me through the event at length. Apparently, it will take place over four days – two practice days followed by two competition days – and be contested by teams from Austria, Finland, Germany, The Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, Switzerland, and the UK.
As Rich expounds the complexities of the
minigolf scene with the vim of a zealot, it is
difficult not to share his enthusiasm, although
I do balk a little when he explains that during
the event the teams will use two courses of
18 holes each, and basically spend four entire
days lapping the same 36 holes.
One course has a smoother brown concrete surface known as “beton”, while the other has a grey, more hardened, beton surface known as “eternite”. The distance to the hole from the tee is rarely more than 10m, so the main golf club used is a putter.
“Four days?” I find myself asking. “Won’t they get bored and just keep getting holes in one?” Richard gives a little chuckle at my naivety. “Oh no! The top guys spend a week practising for some events.” Clearly, this is going to be an intense couple of days.
Tampere, a breezy, beautiful place, is Finland’s third-largest city, and on my first morning in town I have a quick wander around the place to get my bearings. The city bestrides two lakes, Pyhajarvi and Nasijarvi, and as such seems to be surrounded by water. Everybody speaks impeccable English, is unfailingly polite and engaged in healthy outdoorsy pursuits. A large student population gives the city a youthful feel, and like many Scandinavian cities it only really comes alive once night falls and the vodka is cracked open.
As I approach the course, the place is
packed with spectators. Amid the players
striding purposefully around, it’s easy to
spot the Brits, and I head over to watch their
practice session. I soon learn that, although it
is easy to mock, minigolf is actually fiendishly
difficult. Take hole 15, which is proving to
be Squire Gottfried’s nemesis. A deft touch
and concentrated visualisation is required to
shoot the ball up a slope through a drainpipe
leading to the hole. Get the line wrong and
you’re back to the tee. It’s easy to ruin a run of
“aces” (the team’s slang for a hole in one) with
a catastrophic misjudgement on a hole such
as this. At all costs, you must avoid scoring
the dreaded seven – take six shots and it’s all
over, with your score for that hole rounded up
to seven. Later in the weekend, to the delight
of the British team, I will distinguish myself by
making the worst score of the entire weekend
with no less than seven sevens.
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