Irish Independent

Old Head waiting for Irish Open green light if Mount Juliet deal fails

- William S Callahan

THE European Tour could take the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open to the Old Head of Kinsale this year if it fails to come to an agreement with Mount Juliet to extend its one-year deal to two.

The €7 million Rolex Series event was scheduled to take place at the spectacula­r Co Kilkenny resort from May 28-31, but it was postponed on March 30 due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Thanks to the postponeme­nt of September’s Ryder Cup, an Irish Open with a greatly reduced prize fund could still go ahead in

Thomastown from September 24-27 but only if the Government travel restrictio­ns are eased and the European Tour agrees to give Mount Juliet a second bite in 2021.

According to sources with knowledge of the negotiatio­ns, resort owners Tetrarch Capital would only be willing to host a lowkey Irish Open in September if there were no hosting costs this year and they could also be guaranteed a fullfield Rolex Series event with all the bells and whistles next summer.

Having not hosted the Irish Open since 1995, a two-year deal would give Mount Juliet more bang for its buck following the decimation of the tourism business this year.

It appears that Portstewar­t Golf Club, which was reportedly expected to host the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open in 2021, is happy to step aside and wait until 2022 as it pushes this year’s cancelled overseas bookings into next year. Continued in Sport Pullout Page 11

If the European Tour is unable to secure Mount Juliet, the Irish Independen­t understand­s that the Old Head of Kinsale in Co Cork is considered the ideal behindclos­ed-doors Irish Open venue as its spectacula­r 300-foot cliffs would make for dramatic television pictures.

However, it remains to be seen if internatio­nal golfers will be allowed to travel freely to Ireland in September as the pandemic rages worldwide.

The postponeme­nt of the Ryder Cup has freed up the week after the US Open and given the European Tour a window of opportunit­y from September 24-27.

But while Open champion Shane Lowry insists he will come home to play if the Government eases restrictio­ns that require all overseas visitors to self-isolate for 14 days, a second wave could scupper hopes of tour golf here this year.

As things stand, Lowry, this year’s Irish Open host Graeme McDowell and world No 1 Rory McIlroy would all be unable to play the week after the US Open due to the 14-day quarantine requiremen­t.

“I would 100 per cent play a reschedule­d Irish Open in the now vacant September Ryder Cup slot – if the Government restrictio­ns allow for it,” Lowry wrote in his Paddy Power column. “If there is an Irish Open and I am allowed play, I will definitely play.

“The Irish government will have to judge whether public opinion will allow for internatio­nal golfers arriving, playing and departing given how well the Irish public has done to contain the spread of the pandemic.

“The US Open is due to end on the September 20, the week before a reschedule­d Irish Open could be slotted in and I was planning to come home for a couple of weeks after that Major anyway if the quarantine restrictio­ns allow for it,” Lowry (above) added.

“Obviously if players have to quarantine in the US first and then Ireland when they arrive, it’s not going to be very practical for many. But if everything gets the green light, I’d love to be teeing off as the reigning Open champion on home soil.”

Visitors from countries with higher infections rates than Ireland, such as the UK and the USA, would be unlikely right now to make the Green List of countries the Irish Government – one of the

European Tour’s Ryder Cup partners for 2027 at Adare Manor— plans to publish on July 20.

Anyone travelling to Ireland from a Green List country will not have to restrict their movements, and European Tour players based in Europe would be arriving in Ireland on the back of three-week Iberian Swing featuring events in Spain and Portugal.

European Tour CEO Keith Pelley insisted when announcing the UK Swing in May that staging the Irish Open this year was a high priority for him and board member Paul McGinley is still hopeful.

McGinley told Independen­t. ie: “It would be fantastic to have an Irish Open this year and it would give us all something to look forward to after what has been a traumatic few months.”

Simon Alliss, Championsh­ip Director for the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

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