Oliver Gan was a nobody when he first ran for the presidency of the Junior Golf Foundation of the Philippines (JGFP) a few years ago. No long résumé in junior golf politics, no powerhouse bloc loudly backing him, no guarantee people would even treat his campaign as serious. What he did have was nerve.
A shrewd businessman with a swing to match his flamboyant personality, Gan wasn’t just running for a line on his calling card. He was taking a shot at an establishment that had quietly run junior golf for decades. It was the kind of race where most people already assumed they knew the ending.
But Gan ran anyway.
In a small world where familiar surnames and inherited influence usually shape governance, his candidacy felt disruptive, even a little uncomfortable. He talked about scale, exposure, and ambition. He sounded like someone convinced that junior golf in the Philippines didn’t have to stay a feeder system operating quietly in the shadows. Back then, some thought it was reckless. Looking back, maybe that was exactly the point.
Gan won, and he ran JGFP the way you’d expect a disruptor with the keys to run it — fast, loud, and without spending too much time asking permission. Love him or hate him, you can’t say he tiptoes around big ideas. This is a guy who likes swinging for something that leaves a mark.
Which is why what’s about to happen in April in Davao City feels like the next logical move.
With the launch of the JGFP World Team Championships, junior golf is stepping into unfamiliar — but genuinely exciting — territory. This is no longer just about weekend tournaments, age-group trophies, or school rivalries. When you put “world,” “team,” and “championship” together with “Philippines” and “Mindanao,” you’re not just scheduling another event. You’re planting a flag.
Choosing Davao — specifically Apo Golf and Country Club — isn’t just about tee sheets and hotel availability. It’s a message. For years, the biggest junior golf stories were almost always written in Metro Manila or in nearby provinces like Laguna and Cavite. By bringing a world-branded junior event to Mindanao, JGFP is saying two things at once: elite junior golf isn’t a Luzon-only conversation anymore, and Mindanao is ready to host serious, internationally flavored competition.
Davao’s rise as a tourism and sports destination makes the timing feel right. Apo Golf has long been respected by players who grew up on its fairways. Now, when you add top junior teams from around the country — and invited squads from overseas — that familiar track suddenly looks and feels like a small world stage.
For kids in the region who are used to watching big junior events only through photos and clips on their phones, seeing one unfold in their own backyard can be a game-changer. It’s one thing to dream from a distance. It’s another to see the flags, the uniforms, the teams, and think, “Next time, that could be us.”
Over the past few years, JGFP has quietly but steadily strengthened its tournament structure. Its inter-school circuit, now drawing around 400 players from nearly 60 schools, has become the backbone of the program, teaching juniors how to compete in teams, represent something bigger than themselves, and understand what it means to wear colors that matter. The World Team Championships build on that: players will carry club, regional, or even national banners into a field that includes teams from other golf cultures, in formats that reward depth and chemistry as much as one hot scorer.
And that is where the real test begins.
Calling something a “World Team Championships” is easy. Delivering an experience that feels worthy of the name is not. Once the banners go up in Davao, junior golf in the Philippines will be measured differently — by visiting teams, by parents, by coaches, and most of all by the kids themselves. Course setup, organization, pacing, pressure and professionalism will all be judged against standards far bigger than what local junior golf has traditionally demanded of itself.
For the players, the week will be about more than scores. It will be about learning what it feels like to compete for something larger than a medal, to wear a uniform with meaning, and to realize — sometimes uncomfortably — where they stand in a wider world. For parents and coaches, it will offer clarity. Not always comforting, but necessary.
For Oliver Gan, this tournament is the clearest expression yet of how he sees junior golf: not cautious, not content, and certainly not small. It is a bet that Philippine junior golf is ready to be seen, compared, and challenged; that growth comes when you stop protecting the edges and start testing the center.
If the JGFP World Team Championships succeed, they won’t just crown winners in April. They’ll redraw the ceiling of what local junior golf believes is possible. And if they stumble, the ambition will still matter — because movements rarely fail for aiming too high, but for refusing to aim at all.