The Guardian (USA)

Delay in postponing the Open shows just how loud money talks for R&A

- Ewan Murray

We have been left to guess what, precisely, the Royal & Ancient is limping towards. This huge golfing institutio­n, presiding over one of the staples of the British sporting summer, felt compelled to react to a report claiming the 149th Open is set for cancellati­on. The missive from the office of Martin Slumbers didn’t actually mention the c-word at all.

“We are continuing to work through our options for the Open this year, including postponeme­nt,” said the R&A’s chief executive. “Due to a range of external factors, that process is taking some time to resolve. We are well aware of the importance of being able to give clear guidance to fans, players and everyone involved and are working to resolve this as soon as we can. We will give a further update as soon as we are in a position to do so.”

Being kind, this could be labelled a holding statement. If “external factors” are key, one is left to ponder how much control the R&A has of its golden goose. It was reported days earlier that postponeme­nt of the tournament, scheduled for Royal St George’s in midJuly, was borderline inevitable. Forensic

detective work was hardly required to deduce that much. The suggestion of cancellati­on, somewhat curiously, rattled Slumbers or those close to him sufficient­ly to deliver an example of words that say nothing at all.

If the R&A doesn’t know precisely what to do about this year’s Open, something is seriously amiss. Sport has been paralysed by coronaviru­s, with events and seasons dropping from billboards one by one. It is fanciful to suggest the Kent coast can – or should, in respect of public services – host 200,000 visitors and global competitor­s in a golf event in little over three months’ time. The R&A, for its many faults, cannot be ignorant over a pandemic.

At the very least, if not providing a full explanatio­n of contingenc­y, the R&A should have put a public line through Sandwich in its standard slot long before now; spectators alone deserve that much. Augusta National is still to issue detail of a 2020 Masters alternativ­e but it was swift in postponing when coronaviru­s took hold. That the United States Golf Associatio­n hasn’t ditched plans for the US Open in

New York in June catapults golf into territory beyond Clubhouse Cuckoo Land. They and the R&A set the rules for this game, you know.

Which isn’t, of course, to suggest complicati­ons don’t exist. The R&A is just glacial in dealing with them. In profession­al golf, not uniquely, key deliberati­ons relate to a word starting with “m” and rhyming with honey.

There has been speculatio­n regarding the R&A’s insurance provision, say, which may ensure a fiscal gulf between cancellati­on or postponeme­nt. The new date window itself is small; September is realistica­lly the latest month in which the Open could be held, with even that subject to daylight restrictio­ns either curtailing the field or triggering two-tee starts.

With every body in profession­al golf – the R&A, USGA, PGA of America, Augusta National, PGA Tour and European Tour – fighting to play their tournament­s, negotiatio­ns will be inevitably messy. Television companies, bereft of material yet heavy investors in golf, will have a seat at the table.

Royal St George’s will not readily give up their first Open since 2011. Nor will the local economy; it brings an estimated £100m worth of benefits. Yet the notion of just bumping Sandwich into 2021 is an uneasy one. St Andrews, Royal Liverpool and Royal Troon are already set in stone as venues for the three following years.

The R&A has a weird obsession with anniversar­ies; St Andrews was to stage the 150th playing of the Open, with 2023 marking 100 years since Troon’s first one. The calendar can of course be shuffled around but it’s messy, including in respect of Hoylake, where vast ticket sales send the R&A’s bean counters into a state of delirium.

We assume that, by next weekend, overdue clarity will have been provided by the R&A. The Open in July will bite the dust in slow, clunking, ultra-serious form. Twas ever thus. The solution will be far more interestin­g than the inevitable.

 ?? Photograph: François Nel/Getty Images ?? Players on the eighth hole at last year’s Open in Northern Ireland.
Photograph: François Nel/Getty Images Players on the eighth hole at last year’s Open in Northern Ireland.
 ?? Photograph: Kevin C Cox/Getty Images ?? The gates on Magnolia Lane will stay closed until much later this year at best.
Photograph: Kevin C Cox/Getty Images The gates on Magnolia Lane will stay closed until much later this year at best.

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