The Scotsman

Plans for Florida Swing on European Tour hailed as ‘good’ move by Ramsay

- By MARTIN DEMPSTER

The possibilit­y of three European Tour events being played on American soil if a planned Iberian Swing can’t take place due to Covid-19 restrictio­ns has been hailed as a “good” move.

Theunprece­dentedpros­pect of European Tour events taking place on the PGA Tour’s patch was first mentioned by the Daily Telegraph, with the “general idea” having subsequent­ly been confirmed to members in a memo from chief executive Keith Pelley, according to Golf Digest.

It is believed that the three proposed events, the idea for which actually came from the PGA Tour on the back of a new “strategic alliance” with the European Tour, are being considered for immediatel­y after the Masters in April.

The circuit is scheduled to visit Tenerife, Gran Canaria and Portugal in successive weeks, but visitors to Spain from the UK and South Africa are currently banned while Portugal is on a red list.

That means an “elite athlete” exemption would not apply and, with players from South Africa and the UK providing a large chunk of most European Tour line-ups, going ahead with those events under the current travel restrictio­ns would leave the fields decimated. “As a global Tour, we face challenges due to current internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns,” a spokespers­on for the European Tour told The Scotsman in reply to being asked about the possibilit­y of that segment of the schedule becoming a Florida Swing.

“We will therefore continue to explore all options available to enable our members to play a full schedule.”

While no concrete decisions have yet been made, Pelley has already shown that he will pull out all the stops to provide playing opportunit­ies for his membership. Last year, the Canadian witnessed more than 20 tournament­s being either cancelled - the casualties included the Alfred Dunhill

Links Championsh­ip in Scotland - or postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

However, after a threemonth lockdown, he managed to pull together a schedule comprising 22 events between mid-july and the end of the year, including a new sixweek UK Swing.

Richie Ramsay, a three-time European Tour winner, welcomed the possibilit­y of the circuit now breaking new ground in the US, though no mention of locations has yet been made.

“I think it would be good,” said the Aberdonian, who won the US Amateur Championsh­ip at Hazeltine in 2006. “Opportunit­ies are hard to come by, so you need to seize them. I have spent a good amount of time in Florida. They have some world-class courses and plenty of resorts for a tournament in a bubble.”

The European Tour had been due to be in the Middle East this week until the Oman Open was postponed after the Omani government ordered a halt on all sporting events due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The circuit is scheduled to resume next week with the Commercial Bank Qatar Masters before staging backto-back events in Kenya - the Magical Kenya Open and the Kenya Savannah Classic. In his memo to members, Pelley was reported by Golf Digest as saying the preparatio­ns for those events are “progressin­g well”.

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