The Record (Troy, NY)

Limited fans, limited views to start new year on PGA Tour

- By DOUGFERGUS­ON AP Golf Writer

The PGATour plans to start the new year with spectators. There just won’t be very many. And the views, while as gorgeous at Kapalua as anywhere, will be limited.

That doesn’t set the tone for the rest of the West Coast swing, where three tournament­s already have announced there will not be spectators, two of them pro-am events.

The AT&T Pebble Beach ProAm was the most recent to announce a spectator-free event for Feb. 11-14, though it will carry on with its pro-am of corporate titans, entertaine­rs and athletes.

“Unfortunat­ely our ‘ 21 event will be unlike any of the previous editions of the tournament since Monterey County remains in a tier that will not permit live audiences at profession­al events in California,” said Steve John, CEO of the Monterey Peninsula Foundation.

That follows decisions by The American Express in the California desert, the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines and the Sony Open in Honolulu.

As for the Sentry Tournament of Champions, a limited number of tickets will be available. The

Houston Open had a limit of 2,000 a day in November, making it the first domestic PGA Tour event with spectators. Kapalua isn’t releasing the number of ticket sales, though organizers don’t expect more than about 200 or 300 people

The Aloha Club ($900 for four tournament days) provides unobstruct­ed views of the 18th hole and the ninth green, and it includes food and beverage, along with parking. The Kama’aina Aloha Club is a daily ticket ($125) that offers a view of the 18th hole and a place to buy food and drinks.

Both tickets do not allow access to the rest of the Plantation Course.

The Phoenix Open, the rowdiest of all PGA Tour events, is still trying to piece together a plan for fans, except that it won’t be near the 600,000 or more fans it typically attracts during the week.

Scott Jenkins, the tournament chairman for 2021, told Golf Digest the plan is to build a single- story structure for fans on the par-3 16th hole, down from what amounted to stadium seating. He described the situation as “fluid.”

“I’ve stopped trying to predict the future in our COVID world,” Jenkins told Digest. “We’d love to have fans. We’re the ‘People’s Open.’ We also understand that the safety of our fans, players and volunteers is the most important thing.”

HBCU DONATION The PGA Tour has donated $500,000 to five historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es, as part of its intent to be part of the solution in improving the racial culture in society.

That amounts to a $100,000 donation to the women’s golf at Delaware State; men’s and women’s golf at Tennessee State; men’s and women’s golf at Wilberforc­e University in Ohio; and the Bowie State Golf Classic, an annual golf event because the Maryland school does not have a golf team.

The other was at Prairie View A& M, and the $100,000 for the men’s and women’s golf team is in the name of Mack “Pops” Champ. That’s the late grandfathe­r of Cameron Champ, who last month donated $40,000 through his foundation to establish two golf scholarshi­ps in Mack’s name.

THE HALL WAIT Tiger Woods had to wait 19 months to try to defend his title in the Masters, so waiting two years for induction into the World Golf Hall of Fame shouldn’t be a problem.

Woods, retired PGA Tour Commission­er Tim Finchem, four-time LPGA major champion Susie Maxwell Berning and golf course developer and pioneer Marion Hollins were elected during The Players Championsh­ip in March, two days before golf shut down because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The induction ceremony had been scheduled for 2021, presumably during The Players Championsh­ip. Now it will move to the same week in 2022. Among concerns was the state of the pandemic and whether fans — or how many — will be allowed during the Florida swing.

“Given the uncertaint­ies of the COVID-19 pandemic, moving the ceremony back a year will give us a better opportunit­y to properly recognize and honor this important class,” said Greg McLaughlin, CEO of the World Golf Foundation. THE RACE FOR REED Patrick Reed has a chance to make European Tour history as the first American to win what now is called the Race to Dubai. So does Collin Morikawa, the 23-year-old PGA Championsh­ip winner, who has yet to play in continenta­l Europe.

They are among the leading five players going into the season-ending DP World Tour Championsh­ip in Dubai, with Reed leading by 460 points over Tommy Fleetwood and Morikawa trailing by 546 points.

Reed reached the top in this pandemic- shortened season with a victory in the World Golf Championsh­ip in Mexico City, a tie for third in the BMW PGA Championsh­ip at Wentworth, along with a pair of 13th-place finishes in majors (PGA, U.S. Open) and a tie for 10th in the Masters.

While no American has ever topped the European Tour points list, it’s rare for anyone outside Europe to win the Harry Vardon Trophy. Only five players born outside Europe have won, most recently Ernie Els of South Africa in 2003 and 2004. Retief Goosen won the previous two years. Bobby Locke won three times ( 1946, 1950 and 1954), while a fourth South African, Dale Hayes, won in 1975.

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