After claiming an impressive golfing title at the Aims Games, Bayleigh Teepa-Tarau said he “just couldn’t wait to watch” Ryan Fox up close after getting the chance to caddy for the world No. 28.
Teepa-Tarau, a 12-year-old autistic schoolboy from a small rural town in the Bay of Plenty, was invited to caddy for Fox during the Chasing the Fox event at Royal Auckland and Grange on Thursday after winning the Aims Games nine-hole golf competition after only having played three rounds of golf in his life.
He and a group of family and friends from Tāneatua, including teacher aide Whetu Wiremu, were invited to attend the event and rub shoulders with some of the country’s biggest stars.
Teepa-Tarau said it was “good as” to meet Fox, and before the round got under way, the group shared time on the driving range with the likes of Shaun Johnson, Anton Lienert-Brown, Damian McKenzie, Ross Taylor and Fox, before getting a front row look at Fox in action.
“It’s a real special thing for myself and the boys to have whānau here,” Wiremu said. “It’s super special for them to share this opportunity and experience with their parents.”