San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

NUMBER OF FANS AT OPEN UNKNOWN

Torrey officials hopeful there will be some

- BY MARK ZEIGLER

Ten weeks before the 2021 U.S. Open, Torrey Pines Golf Course looks like, well, a golf course.

There are no grandstand­s being erected around tees or greens, no food courts, no merchandis­e tent, no hospitalit­y footprint, no media center. There was supposed to be by now, as there was by March 2008 before the first U.S. Open at Torrey Pines.

“We would have started building infrastruc­ture for 40,000 to 50,000 people per day, like we did in 2008,” said Danny Sink, the U.S. Golf Associatio­n’s senior director for its championsh­ip events. “It takes a lot of infrastruc­ture to host that many people on a golf course. We don’t have a fixed stadium like other sports. It’s building a small city for a week of a championsh­ip.

“There’s a lot of canvas that has to go up, a lot of flooring. It’s usually a threemonth build. That would have started in mid-march. That date has obviously come and gone.”

Hard to start building, though, when you don’t know how many people you’re building for.

And they still don’t. “We hope to have fans; we still feel like we can,” Sink said. “But it’s one of those unique things where this is a different year, where we’re taking direction from others. … It’s not up to us how many people we have.”

In 2008, the U.S. Open drew a record 295,000 spectators at Torrey Pines for practice days, four competitio­n rounds and the 18-hole playoff on Monday between Tiger Woods and Rocco Mediate.

California’s most recent guidance for outdoor live events allows for 20 percent capacity in counties in the red or “substantia­l” tier of COVID-19 risk, which San

Diego County currently is in. That increases to 33 percent in the orange or “moderate” tier, which the county could move into as early as next week. It can double if everyone is vaccinated or tested.

But that’s for venues with fixed seating, like Petco Park or an outdoor music amphitheat­er. None of the tournament­s during the PGA Tour’s West Coast swing in January and February had fans. Nor did the women’s Kia Classic last week at Aviara Golf Club in Carlsbad or this week’s ANA Inspiratio­n in Rancho Mirage, even as approximat­ely 10,000 fans were permitted inside Petco Park for the Padres.

“This guidance,” it says, “is not intended for … general admission venues/activities where the central activity allows or requires patrons to move around shared space.”

Another complicati­on: State regulation­s prohibit walking around with a hot dog and soda, then lowering your mask to eat or drink. You must be in a stationary place, which entails building a concession­s area where you also consume them since fans can’t return to their seats like in a stadium. (“That’s something,” Sink said, “we’re spending a lot of time on and will look different for sure.”)

Yet another: If attendance capacity exceeds on-site parking availabili­ty, you must find ways to shuttle fans to the course with distancing regulation­s that are more stringent for enclosed vehicles.

The U.S. Women’s Open is two weeks earlier in June at The Olympic Club in San Francisco, which is currently in the orange tier. The San Francisco Chronicle reported last week no fans would be permitted, although Sink and other USGA officials are adamant no decision has been made.

A decision is looming for Torrey Pines as well, likely by the third week of April.

“Let me be clear,” Sink said. “We can’t stretch this out until the day before the championsh­ip and then say, ‘OK, come one, come all.’ We think in the next couple weeks we can figure out our plan and get it approved by the county and then the state, and move forward with that. We’re going to do what we can to get some fans on site.

“But we don’t want to do anything to jeopardize our chances to have the championsh­ip. You get careless and something happens, and then the championsh­ip is at risk. That’s the last thing we’re going to do. Our No. 1 goal is to crown a champion and have a great event. No. 2 is obviously to share it with as many people as possible.”

Tickets have quietly been on sale for months, but that was suspended Monday, according to the USGA’S website, “until we have more clarity” about attendance levels. Sink declined to say how many have been sold, or whether it means they’ve reached or exceeded their expected capacity this June.

Also unknown is whether tickets were purchased by out-of-state fans. The current California guidance for all risk levels, even the lowest yellow tier, allows “in-state spectators only.”

Volunteers received an email last week informing them the “majority” of their positions had been eliminated, saying: “The decision … did not come lightly, but we feel it gives us the best opportunit­y to conduct the championsh­ip this year while ensuring the health and safety of all involved.”

One silver lining in this is for local golfers, who can continue to play the North and South courses far longer than expected (while the city continues collecting green fees). The lone inconvenie­nce so far is on the North Course, where a temporary driving range has been built across the first and 18th fairways. All 18 holes remain in play, however, with 1 and 18 shortened slightly, with none of the usual tents erected yet.

Sink hopes to start constructi­on by the end of April. It just won’t look anything like 2008, when the grandstand on the 18th hole seated 6,000 and had room for thousands more standing 10 and 15 deep as Woods famously sank a 12-foot birdie putt to force a playoff.

Sink admitted there might not be any grandstand­s at all this year, because they become a magnet for people to crowd into.

“It was such a great event in 2008,” Sink said. “We were looking forward to replicatin­g that. There might not be as many people there, but we’re still going to crown a champion and there still are going to be the best players in the world competing. That’s not going to change. Inside the ropes, it’s going to be exactly the same.

“It’s definitely going to be different outside the ropes, no doubt about that. It’s going to be more toned down, less people. … We’re very cognizant that we don’t want to do anything wrong that jeopardize­s our event. We’re going to play by the rules. We’re the author of the rules of golf, and we follow rules as well.”

 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE GETTY IMAGES ?? Gonzaga’s Jalen Suggs shoots a game-winning 3-point basket in overtime to defeat UCLA.
JAMIE SQUIRE GETTY IMAGES Gonzaga’s Jalen Suggs shoots a game-winning 3-point basket in overtime to defeat UCLA.

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