Canadian women taking up golf, challenging corporate stereotypes
TORONTO — Gina Izumi was in her first corporate job out of university and told a male colleague her boyfriend enjoyed hitting the links. If Izumi stayed with him, her colleague said jokingly, Izumi would become a “golf widow” — spending her weekends alone at home looking after the kids and taking on chores while he played yet another round.
Izumi was so determined to buck the stereotype that she and her boyfriend went straight to Golf Town to pick up clubs and shoes, then headed to the driving range.
“I didn’t know if I’d like it. I didn’t know if I’d be any good at it, but it didn’t matter … I just wanted to prove that man wrong and never put myself in a position where I let myself be held back unfairly because I was a woman,” she recalled.
More than 25 years later, Izumi is far from a “golf widow.” The senior vice-president of customer success and growth markets at software company SAP Canada is now a seasoned golfer married to the man who taught her how to golf. The couple take golf-centric vacations and have a son who got his first clubs at age four and a daughter who routinely beats her mom on the course.