Champ Foundation Restoring "A South Los Angeles haven where Black youths can learn golf"
/What a wonderful column filed by the LA Times’ Eric Sondheimer after attending the recent Cameron Champ Foundation Junior Clinic at Chester Washington Golf Course. Held during Genesis Invitational week to raise awareness, Champ’s foundation is attempting to get various junior golf programs going after the course lost a First Tee operation two years ago, and is working with Tee Divas and Tee Dudes to help youth golfers in South L.A..
There was 13-year-old Pierre Campa. He was 18 months old when the Campa family from Riverside adopted him in Haiti just days after that country’s destructive 2010 earthquake. At 5, he saw a movie on Netflix titled “The Short Game” about the best 7-year-old golfers competing at a Pinehurst Resort golf course in North Carolina. Suddenly he was hitting a ball in the house with a plastic flute. His father figured out he was trying to play golf. The rest is history.
Campa can drive a ball 250 yards, plays in junior tournaments and hangs out at a golf course in Jurupa Hills. He became a U.S. citizen, loves PGA star Jordan Spieth and wants to keep playing golf. His father, Eddie, has even learned the sport. “I learned to be a good caddy,” he said.