I CAN’T SEE RYDER CUP GOING AHEAD THIS YEAR – McILROY
WORLD NO 1 Rory McIlroy believes the Ryder Cup is unlikely to take place this year and postponing the biennial match play event to 2021 due to the Covid-19 pandemic would be the right call to make.
The golf calendar has been decimated by the coronavirus outbreak, with three of the sport’s four Majors rescheduled and The Open cancelled.
The Ryder Cup is due to take place from September 25-27 at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin but fans will almost certainly be asked not to attend.
“My personal hunch is that I don’t see how it is going to happen, so I do not think that it will happen,” McIlroy (31) told the BBC.
“I think the majority of players would like to see it pushed back until 2021 so that they can play in front of crowds and have the atmosphere that makes the Ryder Cup so special.
“The players are the ones that make the Ryder Cup. If they are not on board with it and don’t want to play then there is no Ryder Cup. I see it being pushed back until 2021 and, honestly, I think that will be the right call.”
Spectacle
The Holywood star previously said the absence of spectators would ruin the spectacle of the Ryder Cup, while European captain Pádraig Harrington admitted it would be for the greater good of the sport for the event to take place this year even with empty galleries. Professional golf has been suspended since March but the PGA Tour is hoping to resume its season with the Charles Schwab Challenge in June.
Meanwhile, Lee Westwood struck a more optimistic tone when discussing the European Tour’s planned resumption at the British Masters, believing that it will go ahead in July.
Westwood will host the tournament at Close House, which is scheduled to be the first European Tour event since the coronavirus pandemic forced the cancellation or postponement of 17 competitions.
“The course is already in fantastic condition as you’d expect. They’ve had seven or eight weeks without any play so the green staff have been able to do some good work. I’ve seen a massive change in the condition of the greens over the last couple of weeks since the weather got better.”