Skip to content
    • Tour Homepage
    • PGA Tour
    • LIV Golf
    • DP World Tour
    • LPGA
    • LET
    • The Masters
    • The Open
    • The Players
    • US Open
    • PGA Championship
    • Ryder Cup
    • Solheim Cup
    • WITB
    • Betting
    • News
    • Features
    • Equipment Homepage
    • Reviews
    • Drivers
    • Fairway Woods
    • Hybrids
    • Irons
    • Wedges
    • Putters
    • Golf Balls
    • DMDs
    • Apparel
    • Shoes
    • Trolleys
    • Features
    • News
  • Buying Advice
    • Rules
    • WHS
    • Features
    • News
    • Instruction Homepage
    • Driving Tips
    • Long Game
    • Iron Play
    • Short Game
    • Putting
    • Learn from the pros
    • Course Management
    • Fitness
    • Mental Game
    • Nutrition
  • Giveaways
    • Top 100 Rankings
    • Travel
    • Top 100s Tour
    • Society Guide
    • NCG Golf Podcast
    • NCG Top 100s Podcast
    • Your Golf Podcast by NCG
  • Digital Magazine
National Club GolferNational Club Golfer Logo
  • TourHas submenu items

    Tour Homepage

    • PGA Tour
    • LIV Golf
    • DP World Tour
    • LPGA
    • LET
    • The Masters
    • The Open
    • The Players
    • US Open
    • PGA Championship
    • Ryder Cup
    • Solheim Cup
    • WITB
    • Betting
    • News
    • Features
  • EquipmentHas submenu items

    Equipment Homepage

    • Reviews
    • Drivers
    • Fairway Woods
    • Hybrids
    • Irons
    • Wedges
    • Putters
    • Golf Balls
    • DMDs
    • Apparel
    • Shoes
    • Trolleys
    • Features
    • News
  • Buying Advice
  • ClubHas submenu items
    • Rules
    • WHS
    • Features
    • News
  • InstructionHas submenu items

    Instruction Homepage

    • Driving Tips
    • Long Game
    • Iron Play
    • Short Game
    • Putting
    • Learn from the pros
    • Course Management
    • Fitness
    • Mental Game
    • Nutrition
  • Giveaways
  • CoursesHas submenu items
    • Top 100 Rankings
    • Travel
    • Top 100s Tour
    • Society Guide
  • PodcastsHas submenu items
    • NCG Golf Podcast
    • NCG Top 100s Podcast
    • Your Golf Podcast by NCG
  • Digital Magazine

Sign up here for our newsletter and you'll never slice a drive again. Promise.

Newsletter sign up

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
National Club Golfer Logo

© 2026 National Club Golfer | 2 Arena Park, Tam Lane, LS17 9BF

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Editorial Policy
  • Meet the NCG Team
  • Privacy
  • Terms & Conditions
Country: gb Page generated at: Friday, 1 May 2026 at 3:14:23 British Summer Time
club
Features
Golf’s silent killer: The eye-opening picture of a lifetime of sun damage

published: May 24, 2020

|

updated: Sep 12, 2024

Golf’s silent killer: The eye-opening picture of a lifetime of sun damage

Steve CarrollLink

FacebookXInstagramYouTubePodcast0 comments

Our club man thought he was vigilant when it came to the dangers of the sun. Then he saw his face under ultra-violet light

skin cancer

Steve Boothroyd has paused for dramatic effect. I’ve just lifted my head out of a contraption that looks like something they took pictures with 150 years ago and, if I’m honest, I’m a little bit apprehensive.

Without protection, I can last about 10 minutes in the midday sun. Then I can just feel my skin heating up and I’m compelled to run for shade.

Fair haired, and fairer skinned, I’ve used sun cream religiously all my life. From the start of March until the end of October, I won’t step on a golf course without it.

I’m not talking about a brief sliver wiped across the forehead, either. I use it in volume and I use it often.

I wear a hat constantly. I have wrap around polarising sunglasses that maximise protection from ultra violet light.

And yet, as I wait to see the damage that 43 years on the planet has done to my skin, I’m not confident about the results.

The picture is about to be revealed and, whatever it was shows, that image previously unseen will become a permanent fixture in my brain.

“We want people to think about why, and how, their skin is getting damaged and what they can do about it,” says Boothroyd, the man behind the unusual looking camera and a volunteer at skin cancer charity Skcin UK.

“It’s only education and what we want to do is raise the awareness of people and say ‘actually, the damage is being caused but you don’t necessarily always see it’.

“You’ve got damage you didn’t know was there, it’s being caused by the sun, so what can you do about it?

“That allows us to think about the five S’s of sun safety: slipping on clothing, slopping on cream, slapping on a hat, sliding on some sunglasses and seeking the shade wherever you can.”

Advertisement

There has been a 45 per cent increase in the number of skin cancer cases in the UK over the past half decade.

Some 250,000 people are diagnosed each year, a figure Skcin chief executive Marie Tudor actually believes to be an underestimation.

“The skin is the biggest organ in the body,” she says. “It is the only cancer you can see and 86 per cent of cases are preventable. So why don’t we do something about it?

“It’s costing the NHS £350 million a year. All that money is being spent and it’s an absolute no-brainer that we need to be taking protection more seriously.”

That’s clearly an imperative for golfers – a sport that takes place under the unforgiving glare of the sun’s rays.

I’ve played the sport all of my adult life and a fair chunk of my childhood. I travel all over the country and can be on a golf course, for hours at a time, three or four times a week in the height of the season.

Which is why, even despite the precautions I take, I’m nervous. Steve shows me the first picture. It’s me as I am, a slightly unflattering image but it’s the face I see in the mirror in the morning.

Then he shows me the second portrait, this time of my face under ultra-violet light. I gasp. It’s covered in dark spots.

“They look a bit like freckles but they are signs of sun damage,” explains Boothroyd. “The ultra violet is absorbed by a substance called melanin. That is your skin’s natural protectant and it’s a pigment that absorbs ultra violet really well.

“If the melanin forms a continuous film and floats to the surface then you would call it a tan. You say ‘what a fantastic tan I’ve got’.

“In reality, what you’ve got is very consistent damage. A dermatologist would say there is no such thing as a healthy tan. A tan is simply a sign of damage.

“So what we can see here is damage that sits underneath the skin. You can’t see it at the surface but you can below. That’s the wow moment.

“The reason you can see the little melanin spots is that your skin has detected that damage is being done, or detected there is UV around, and it starts to protect itself.

“100% of people who are of a certain skin type will show some sort of damage. We don’t use sun cream all the time, or protect ourselves all the time and we don’t sit in a dark box all the time.

“Going out in the sun is good, we like the warmth, we like being outside and it is really healthy for you.

“It’s all good stuff but we don’t protect ourselves and, from an early age, we are encouraged to be outside and we don’t always wear sun protection.

“Unless you are wearing sun protection 100% of the time, from the minute you walk out of the house to the minute you walk back in, you are going to get some level of damage.”

If that was an eye-opener for me, then it should be for the rest of you as well – who enjoy a spell out in the summer warmth and, when the effects of the coronavirus pandemic finally start to subside, a pint or two on the terrace.

“This is 43 years of sun exposure,” concludes Boothroyd as we scan the picture of my heavily marked face. “This photograph is unique to you. Nobody else has a photograph like this.

Advertisement

“Now check your skin on a regular basis. Wherever you expose your skin, there is a risk of skin cancer or some damage possibly leading to skin cancer.

“It’s checking your back, legs, soles of your feet, toenails. If you see anything you don’t feel comfortable with go and see your GP, get taken to a dermatology clinic and they will then make an assessment using the tools, skills and knowledge they have.”

You can learn more about Skcin by visiting their website.

Follow NCG on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram – and don’t forget to subscribe to our YouTube channel for free online golf instruction, the latest equipment reviews, and much, much more.

  • More from NCG: Golf after lockdown? It’s reassuringly familiar…
  • More from NCG: How have Callaway fairway woods changed in the last 25 years?
  • More from NCG: What are the best holes you’ve ever played?

Thanks for stopping by.

We wondered if you might like to contribute to supporting our journalism?

As the world enters uncharted waters, we’d like to be able to keep our content open for all to entertain and inform in the months ahead.

We’d like to think we are the voice of the ordinary golfer the world over. Whether your interest is in the game from tour level to grassroots, the latest equipment, or independent course rankings, we’ve got you covered.

If you want to read more about how you can help us and to donate, please CLICK HERE.

Advertisement

About the author

Steve Carroll
Steve Carroll

A journalist for more than 25 years, Steve has been immersed in club golf for almost as long.

A former club captain, he has passed the Level 3 Rules of Golf exam with distinction having attended the R&A’s prestigious Tournament Administrators and Referees Seminar.

Steve has officiated at a host of high-profile tournaments, including Open Regional Qualifying, PGA Fourball Championship, English Men’s Senior Amateur, and the North of England Amateur Championship. In 2023, he made his international debut as part of the team that refereed England vs Switzerland U16 girls.

A part of NCG’s Top 100s panel, Steve has a particular love of links golf and is frantically trying to restore his single-figure handicap. He’d like to tell you he floats around 10. The reality is more like 13.

Steve plays at Sandburn Hall, in York, and is a country member at Close House in Newcastle. He has served on various club committees during his time in the game, and is the current Rules Secretary at Sandburn.

Having studied history at Newcastle University, he became a journalist having passed his NCTJ exams at Darlington College of Technology. He began his career working on weekly papers in Newcastle, before joining the York Press in 2001. After five years as a news reporter, he joined the sports desk – specialising in horse racing and snooker – and was Digital Sports Editor when he joined National Club Golfer in 2016.

What’s in Steve’s bag: TaylorMade Stealth 2 driver, 3-wood, and hybrids; Caley 01T irons 4-PW; TaylorMade Hi-Toe wedges, Odyssey 2Ball Microhinge putter.

Twitter

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

What's Popular

Golfers signing scorecards | Source: Getty Images Handicap allowances scorecard

Ireland, Scotland and Wales adopt WHS allowance changes – as England go it alone

By Steve Carroll | Apr 1, 2026

Read full article Ireland, Scotland and Wales adopt WHS allowance changes – as England go it alone
Bryson DeChambeau at LIV Golf Korea | Source: LIV Golf

Show me the money! How much has each LIV player made since signing up?

By Matt Chivers | Apr 28, 2026

Read full article Show me the money! How much has each LIV player made since signing up?
Victoria Golf Resort & Spa, Managed by Accor, in Vilamoura, Giveaway | Source: NCG

Win a 2-night stay for two at the Victoria Golf Resort & Spa, Managed by Accor, in Vilamoura

By Paul Miller | Apr 17, 2026

Read full article Win a 2-night stay for two at the Victoria Golf Resort & Spa, Managed by Accor, in Vilamoura
Masters champion Rory McIlroy plays an approach stroke during the third round of the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club | Source: Kohjiro Kinno

Masters Sunday tee times 2026

By Matt Chivers | Apr 11, 2026

Read full article Masters Sunday tee times 2026
highest paid caddies

Who are the highest-paid caddies in golf? The figures might shock you…

By Samuel Neale | Oct 21, 2025

Read full article Who are the highest-paid caddies in golf? The figures might shock you…
MALELANE, SOUTH AFRICA - DECEMBER 05: Golf balls are seen on the practice facilitates prior to the Alfred Dunhill Championship at Leopard Creek Country Club on December 05, 2023 in Malelane, South Africa. (Photo by Luke Walker/Getty Images)

Can I get away with playing a ball that was out of bounds?

By Steve Carroll | Apr 27, 2026

Read full article Can I get away with playing a ball that was out of bounds?
Gary Player of South Africa on the driving range before the final round in the 42nd Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on April 9, 1978 | Source: Getty Images

Masters Special: Which Major golf brand could be the next to fade into history?

By Paul Miller | Apr 13, 2026

Read full article Masters Special: Which Major golf brand could be the next to fade into history?
David Puig of LIV Golf | Source: Getty Images

Big DP World Tour events still allow LIV Golfers to compete, but how?

By Matt Chivers | Apr 27, 2026

Read full article Big DP World Tour events still allow LIV Golfers to compete, but how?
how do you qualify for the Masters

How to qualify for the Masters in 2026

By Matt Chivers | Aug 26, 2025

Read full article How to qualify for the Masters in 2026
golfers private jets

Which golfers own private jets and how much do they cost?

By Matt Coles | Oct 16, 2025

Read full article Which golfers own private jets and how much do they cost?

Who is Rory McIlroy’s wife? Meet Erica Stoll

By Matt Chivers | Jan 3, 2025

Read full article Who is Rory McIlroy’s wife? Meet Erica Stoll
Is Tiger Woods playing in The Open

Where will The Open Championship be held in 2027, 2028 and 2029?

By Matt Chivers | Apr 27, 2026

Read full article Where will The Open Championship be held in 2027, 2028 and 2029?