The traditional driving-in ceremony for the new captain of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews took place on the first tee of the Old Course on Friday.
Keith Macintosh began his year in office with a drive at precisely 8am as a cannon fired alongside the tee.
A large crowd of onlookers gathered to watch the ceremony along with a number of past captains.
Mr Macintosh will represent the R&A and support its work in developing golf around the world.
He will attend championships in the professional and amateur games and assume an ambassadorial role.
“I was a little more relaxed on the driving range than I was there,” Mr Macintosh said of his strike.
He added: “When you look around at all the distinguished past captains it makes you feel pretty intimidated and humble really.
“I am very much looking forward to serving as captain and representing the club.”
A distinguished amateur golfer, Mr Macintosh won the Scottish Amateur Championship at Prestwick in 1979 and the Belgian Open Amateur Championship the following year.
The former Scotland international was also a member of the Great Britain and Ireland St Andrews Trophy team that defeated the Continent of Europe 19.5 to 10.5 at Royal St George’s in 1980.
He has served on the Amateur Status and Finance Committees of the R&A and has been a member since 1994.
In 1999 he won the Royal Medal, the club’s principal scratch medal prize at its Autumn Meeting.
An honorary member of Cardross Golf Club and former chairman of Prestwick Golf Club. Mr Macintosh plays to a handicap of three.
He was born in Cardross, Argyll in 1949 and studied law at Glasgow University before serving his legal apprenticeship in the city and becoming a solicitor at a practice in Dumbarton.
In 1987, he was appointed company secretary of Clydesdale Bank.
After nine years in the role he returned to practising law as a partner in practices in Glasgow and then Dumbarton and Helensburgh.
He retired in 2009.
Mr Macintosh lives with his wife Diana and has two sons, Stewart and Scott.
In the past, the club captaincy was bestowed on the winner of the annual Challenge for the Silver Club but by the early 19th Century the captaincy had become an elected office.
Part of the tradition is that a gold sovereign is paid by the new captain to buy his golf ball back from the caddie who retrieves and returns it.
Experienced caddie John Boyne returned the captain’s ball for the first time in his 15th season on the links.
He said: “I’m relieved because I can’t run any more. I’m getting older and older and I was thinking this moment was disappearing.
“Since 2002, I’ve been watching the ball going down my right side, or left side, and never actually into my arms so I’m delighted for a change.”