Is Golf an expensive sport?

Invest thousands, to save millions

Eddy T.

2/27/20261 min read

Golf may seem like an expensive sport to begin with.

.
But whether something is “expensive” or “cheap”

always depends on what you compare it to.

.

If you compare golf to football —

yes, it costs more.

But if you compare it to an entrance

scholarship to an Ivy League university,
or to a professional career

in one of the highest-paid sports in the world

— then golf is not expensive at all.

.

It is an investment.

.

Of course, reaching that level requires

serious training and equivalent effort.

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The real question is:

How can a child become outstanding?
if they are trained under

ordinary, unstructured systems?

.

This does not mean our course

is “better” than others

— please don’t misunderstand.

.
But structure matters.

Measurement matters.

High-performance environment matters.

.

Australia is widely recognized as

one of the strongest education

and sports science systems in the world.

.
World-class golfers such as

Adam Scott, Jason Day,

Minjee Lee, Min Woo Lee,

Aaron Baddeley, Hannah Green,

rising stars like Karl Vilips and Elvis Smylie
have all developed within

the Australian high-performance training system.

.

At the heart of it is the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) —
a measurable, structured,

elite development pathway.

.

RS Academy brings that philosophy to Thailand.

.

We are the first in Thailand to implement

an advanced, measurable

High-Performance Training Program

inspired by the same system used at AIS.

Back for almost 20 years

.

Beyond skill development,

we also provide academic

and athletic pathways

to top-tier universities

in the USA, England, Australia,

Taiwan, and beyond.

.

For parents seeking the best

long-term opportunity for their child,

.
we humbly present ourselves

as a reliable partner in that journey.

.

We have already helped develop many

internationally recognized golfers.

.

The question is not

whether golf costs more today.

.

The question is —
would your child be the next success one?