Like ‘looking through a straw’: How blind golfer Kevin Frost stays the course | CBC News

When Kevin Frost goes to sink a shot, he’s not watching for that moment when the golf ball disappears over the lip of the hole and drops into the cup with a satisfying plunk. 

Instead, he’s listening for the “yesss!” of the person standing next to him who, through their words and actions, has helped guide the ball to its destination.

If that person is longtime guide and friend Nigel Bruce, Frost might even get a happy dance. 

“Nigel’s dancing and I’m going, ‘I guess it went in?’ That’s kind of how blind golf works,” jokes Frost, a world champion speed skater who decided seven years ago to take up golf, and who is now set to compete for Canada at the International Blind Golf Association World Championships in South Africa.

A gif of golfing through a straw.
This looped video demonstrates how Usher Syndrome has affected Frost’s vision, which he compares to looking through a drinking straw. (CBC)

Blind golf’s ‘secret family’ 

Frost has Usher Syndrome, a rare genetic disease that causes both vision and hearing loss. Frost’s hearing faded to about 10 per cent when he was 11, and around the age of 30 he lost all but four per cent of vision.

To golf, Frost is paired with a sighted guide who assists with everything from driving the cart, to choosing the right club for the conditions, to making sure he tees off in the right direction.

He calls the guides blind golf’s “secret family.”

Two men on a putting green.
Nigel Bruce, right, says he and Frost, left, have now formed a friendship and like to cap off a round with a beer or two, like ‘real golfers.’ (David Bates/CBC)

“The only thing I can see is … the ball on the tee. So I would set up and I would ask my guy what are [the] obstacles, and I go ahead and hit the ball,” Frost explained. 

After he swings, he asks for a report.

“The first thing I do is I look behind me [and ask], ‘Nigel, how did I do?'”

A man on speed skates with a dog on the ice.
Before taking up blind golf, Frost was a three-time world champion in blind speed skating. He’s also excelled at blind rowing, blind track running and tandem cycling. (Submitted by Kevin Frost)

With the help of his hearing aids and lip-reading, Frost is able to communicate on the course as long as things are relatively quiet.

His vision — Frost compares it to looking through a drinking straw — presents a greater challenge, and can also affect his balance. Dealing with the stark contrast between sun and shade can also be tricky. 

A man golfs with a dog in the foreground.
Frost’s former guide dog Lewis takes a well-earned rest on the green at Pine View Golf Course. Lewis died in January, so Frost is now on the wait-list for another canine companion. (Submitted by Kevin Frost)

Guides and dogs

Frost currently golfs with the assistance of three guides: John McCarney, his fiancée Loretta Lachance and Bruce, whom Frost met three years ago at Pine View Golf Course when the two were paired for a round.

Bruce says it took three holes before he realized Frost was blind. Now, Bruce helps him navigate the course and set up his swing.

“I just help him a little bit, just make sure he’s aligned. Just make sure he’s actually going down the middle of the fairway,” Bruce said.

“He’s got a great grip, he’s got a great stance and a great swing. So he does that on his own.” 

A dog on a golf cart.
Frost was often asked if Lewis retrieved golf balls. ‘That’d be kind of cool, but service guide dogs don’t pick up golf balls,’ he said. (Submitted by Kevin Frost)

Besides his human guide, Frost is usually accompanied by a guide dog. Until recently, it was a golden retriever named Lewis. (Lewis died in January, so Frost is now on the wait-list for a new canine companion.)

Two men at a golf course.
Bruce, left, has been one of Frost’s regular golf guides for the past three years. (David Bates/CBC)

Just the latest sport

Frost, a three-time blind speed-skating world champion, says his background in other sports helped him pick up golf quickly.

During his 25 years in that skating, he earned nine records and 80 medals, sometimes competing against sighted skaters. He’s also excelled at blind rowing, blind track running and tandem cycling.

A close-up of a man golfing.
Frost says there are upsides to being deaf and blind on the course. ‘If I don’t want to hear somebody, I just turn myself off. If I don’t want to see somebody, I just turn my head out of my tunnel vision.’ (David Bates/CBC)

Seven years after turning his attention to golf, Frost earned himself a spot representing Canada at the World Championships in Cape Town later this month.

He’ll be the only Canadian B2 player in attendance, meaning he has a visual field of less than five degrees.

A man golfing on a simulator with clubs in the foreground.
Frost is hoping to keep his skills sharp ahead of the world championship by using golf simulators. (David Bates/CBC)

When he’s not training, Frost is involved in advocacy and humanitarian work, fundraising for hearing aids for children in Mexico. He’s also been named a United Way community builder.

Frost recently published his first book, titled Deaf Blind Champion. He’s also involved at Ontario Blind Golf, where he encourages others to get out of the house and try a new sport.

“At the end of the day, I gotta find a way to adapt. In life, it’s all about adapting to whatever you want to do.”

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