Calgary Herald

PGA Tour will not allow fans at the Memorial

- FRANK PINGUE

The PGA Tour said Monday next week’s Memorial Tournament in Dublin, Ohio, which was supposed to be the first since the circuit’s return from a three-month COVID -19 hiatus to include spectators, will instead be held without fans.

The Jack Nicklaus-hosted event at Muirfield Village Golf Club had received state approval in midjune to have limited attendance and planned to allow 20 per cent maximum capacity on the property for the July 16-19 event.

But the PGA Tour said that due to the rapidly changing dynamics of the COVID-19 crisis, the Memorial would instead go ahead as its sixth consecutiv­e tournament without fans.

“Given the broader challenges communitie­s are facing due to the ongoing COVID -19 pandemic, we need to stay focused on the No. 1 priority for our return to golf — the health and safety of all involved,” PGA Tour commission­er Jay Monahan said in a news release.

“While this was a difficult decision, it was one made collective­ly, and we are appreciati­ve of the process undertaken to this point that will allow us to welcome on-site fans when the time is right.”

The number of U.S. coronaviru­s deaths has exceeded 130,000, following a surge of new cases. Nationally, cases were nearing three million, the highest tally in the world and double the infections reported in the second most affected country, Brazil.

The Memorial will feature some of the biggest names in golf as world No. 1 Rory Mcilroy and fivetime major winner Phil Mickelson are among those who have already committed to the event ahead of Friday’s deadline.

Ohio Gov. Mike Dewine said the decision to close the course to the public was the right one.

“I know it was a difficult decision to make, but the organizers of the Memorial Tournament have put the health and safety of players and fans first,” said Dewine.

Since the PGA Tour returned to action in June, it has held spectator-free tournament­s in Texas, South Carolina, Connecticu­t and Michigan. Muirfield will host this week’s Workday Charity Open, which will also be closed to the public.

Six PGA Tour players have tested positive for COVID-19.

 ?? SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY IMAGES ?? PGA Tour commission­er Jay Monahan says fans will be back on the golf course “when the time is right.”
SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY IMAGES PGA Tour commission­er Jay Monahan says fans will be back on the golf course “when the time is right.”

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