Divers save golfer from sinking feeling

Divers came to the rescue when a golfer lost his watch and wedding ring after watching his golf bag and trolley plunge into a lake on the golf course.

Alan Neill was playing the final hole on the iconic Twenty Ten Course at Celtic Manor when disaster struck. Having left his trolley alongside a bunker by the green, he could only watch in horror as the wind blew the trolley down a bank and into the lake.

Mr Neill used a bunker rake to fish his golf bag, minus the trolley and several irons, out of the lake. It was only when he was assessing the damage that the five-handicap golfer realised he had left a golf bag pocket containing his valuables open.

His mobile phone was soggy yet safe, but a £1,500 watch and his wedding ring were nowhere to be seen and extensive trawling of the bank by Mr Neill and his three golfing buddies failed to find them.

“I even stripped down to my boxer shorts and went in looking for them,” said the 39-year-old financial controller. “But it’s a steep bank and the water was very murky.

“I did manage to find five or six of my missing golf clubs but it was absolutely freezing, too cold to stay in for more than a few minutes. I was losing hope and thought our attempts to find the watch and the wedding ring might have buried them further under the sludge on the bottom of the lake.”

Mr Neill stayed overnight at the five-star hotel, the venue for the 2010 Ryder Cup, and then watched Celtic Manor greenkeepers take over the search in the morning but another two hours trawling the bottom with a fishing net yielded hundreds of golf balls, but nothing else.

The hapless golfer then had to head back to work in Gloucester but Celtic Manor had not abandoned all hope. The resort called in Cynon Valley Sub Aqua Club, a group of divers who had performed exercises before in a separate irrigation reservoir for the golf courses.

The team accepted the challenge and, after a couple of hours of systematic searching, advanced diver Howard Lewis was able to find the watch and wedding ring with the help of underwater metal-detecting equipment.

“I’m over the moon,” said Mr Neill from Co Down, Northern Ireland.  “The watch is quite valuable but I was most worried about losing the wedding ring.

“Most things are replaceable but a wedding ring is not. We’re celebrating our 10th wedding anniversary in September so it feels great to have the ring back.

“The watch was still ticking when they found it so my only losses are a seven-iron and a GPS range-finding device, which I retrieved at the time but it has not worked since being in the water.

“All in all, it’s a very happy ending and I can’t thank the divers and the team at Celtic Manor enough. That was customer service to the extreme.”

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