Brampton School of GOLF

Brampton School of GOLF

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Listen to the needs and wants of those interested in golf but don’t yet play. Reach out to the community and perhaps survey them on what they are looking for.

Maybe ask them what their apprehensions are. Accommodate these individuals.

05/21/2026

WWW.ANILPERERAGOLF.COM, Let's have an interesting and very honest discussion — and I think the answer is a combination of infrastructure, sporting culture, economics, coaching systems, and psychology, rather than genetics or ethnicity.
Players like Aaron Rai, Akshay Bhatia, Sahith Theegala, and emerging names like Yurav Premalal are proving that Indian-origin athletes can absolutely compete at the highest levels of world golf.
But why do many diaspora players appear to develop faster than golfers trained entirely within India?
Here are the biggest reasons:
1. Golf ecosystems in the West are far stronger
A young golfer growing up in the U.S., England, South Africa, or Australia is exposed to:
• elite junior tours,
• year-round competition,
• high-quality practice facilities,
• sports science,
• fitness trainers,
• mental coaches,
• collegiate golf pathways,
• and stronger competitive depth.
That environment accelerates development dramatically.
In India, talented juniors still often face:
• limited access to championship golf courses,
• expensive memberships,
• fewer elite tournaments,
• less advanced coaching depth,
• and weaker competitive fields overall.
Golf is a sport where environment matters enormously.
2. Competitive culture starts earlier
In countries like the U.S., junior golfers compete constantly from ages 6–7 onward:
• AJGA events,
• state championships,
• NCAA recruiting,
• national rankings,
• elite coaching camps.
That creates “pressure conditioning.”
For example, Sahith Theegala and Akshay Bhatia grew up competing against future PGA Tour players every week. That normalizes elite performance.
Meanwhile, many Indian golfers develop technically, but not always under the same intensity of competition.
3. The diaspora often combines Indian discipline with Western sporting systems
This is the part many people quietly notice.
Many Indian-origin families emphasize:
• discipline,
• education,
• repetition,
• sacrifice,
• long-term commitment,
• family support.
When those cultural traits are combined with elite Western sports systems, the result can be very powerful.
Aaron Rai’s story reflects this strongly — his family made enormous sacrifices for his development.
A lot of these players are extremely structured, patient, and process-oriented.
4. India still lacks a broad golf culture
In India:
• cricket dominates attention,
• golf is still seen as elite/private,
• public facilities are limited,
• and the talent pool is comparatively tiny.
The U.S. alone has millions of golfers and thousands of elite juniors competing yearly.
Statistically, stronger systems eventually produce more world-class players.
5. The mental freedom factor
This is subtle but important.
Diaspora athletes often grow up with:
• less national pressure,
• less bureaucracy,
• less dependence on federations,
• and more freedom to develop independently.
Many Indian athletes inside India still navigate:
• institutional politics,
• sponsorship limitations,
• inconsistent support systems,
• and social pressure around career choices.
That can affect long-term athletic growth.
6. Golf today is becoming more global
This is actually the exciting part.
The success of players like:
• Vijay Singh,
• Aaron Rai,
• Akshay Bhatia,
• and Sahith Theegala
is creating visibility and belief for the next generation.
You are now seeing Indian-origin golfers become normal contenders on elite tours, which was rare 15–20 years ago.
That said, India itself is improving:
• better academies,
• more international exposure,
• stronger junior golf,
• sports science awareness,
• and more families treating golf as a serious profession.
So the gap may narrow over the next decade.
In my opinion, the biggest difference is not “talent.”
It is:
high-performance systems + competitive exposure + long-term developmental support.
When Indian-origin players grow up inside those systems, their natural discipline and family commitment can become a major advantage. WWW.ANILPERERAGOLF.COM

05/04/2026






04/30/2026

• Early years = foundation phase
Grip, posture, balance, and one repeatable motion (your “one club, one swing” philosophy fits perfectly here).
• Development years = training discipline
Structured practice, learning how to practice with intention, not just hitting balls.
• Competition phase = ex*****on under pressure
This is where your “stay ahead to the finish line” idea works well—but it’s not about rushing ahead. It’s about:
o Staying present shot-by-shot
o Managing emotions
o Trusting the training when it matters
BRAMPTON SCHOOL OF GOLF.



04/28/2026

Congrataulations Aiyanna Athapattu, Gold Medal. Dedicated student from Brampton School of Golf. An energetic future promise!

04/22/2026
04/15/2026

Get a jump start on Spring Golf Lessons!

04/11/2026

Know your Fundamentals, your set up fundamentals are key to having success in your swing. This is a good example of how to create the algorythm for each of your swings.
WWW.ANILPERERAGOLF.COM

04/08/2026

We are in Brampton and Mississauga for your convenience. Learn in Spring to play in Summer, 5 Lessons Package will teach you to play with all your clubs. Putting, Chipping, Wedges, Irons, Woods and Driver.
Start learning on your own private time or with your partner, we encourage you to make use of our beautiful summer playing GOLF.
We will provide all equipment throughout your lessons and provide professional advise to purchase your own.
We take all the guess work out and put you on the right track.








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Toronto, ON

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 7pm
Tuesday 7am - 7pm
Wednesday 7am - 7pm
Thursday 7am - 7pm
Friday 7am - 7pm
Saturday 7am - 7pm
Sunday 7am - 7pm