Shepparton News

Open in serious doubt

AUSTRALIA’S MAIN EVENTS HANG BY THREAD AS COVID-19 THREATENS TO CURTAIL THEM

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D-Day is fast approachin­g for golf officials amid fears COVID-19 will wipe out the Australian Open for the second year running.

The global pandemic forced the abandonmen­t of the summer’s three f lagship events last year — the Australian Open men’s and women’s tournament­s and the Australian PGA Championsh­ip, leaving touring profession­als across the country battling to make ends meet.

Many relied on JobKeeper to get through the crisis, but a year on, and already the

Northern Territory PGA Championsh­ip, which was to have launched the summer program, has been postponed.

Originally scheduled for August 19-22, the tournament has been pushed back to September 16-19 because of Australia’s border closures and the inability of players from NSW, Victoria and southeast Queensland to travel to the Territory.

The Australian Open is slated for The Australian Golf Club in Sydney from November 25-28, three months away.

But with Greater Sydney locked down until at least the end of September and coronaviru­s infection numbers hitting a daily record yesterday of 919 plus at least two more deaths, the prospect of the event being staged in NSW looks grim.

‘‘The next few weeks are going to be critical to our decision-making on this,’’ a Golf Australia spokesman said.

‘‘There’s a lot for us to work through and obviously a lot of uncertaint­y.

‘‘We’ve always been keen to get the tournament back on this summer one way or another and we have the date in place, but there will need to be ongoing discussion­s with the key partners and stakeholde­rs before we can decide.

‘‘It’s under way now and we’ll be making a call in the near future.’’

The Australian Open hasn’t been cancelled for consecutiv­e years since World War II.

Even if it does go ahead, potentiall­y in another state and at a later date, there’s next to no chance of any of the usual US PGA Tour stars like Cameron Smith, Marc Leishman, Adam Scott, Jason Day or reigning champion Matt Jones returning to Australia to vie for the Stonehaven Cup.

But it’s not just the men’s Open and PGA Championsh­ip — scheduled for Royal Queensland in Brisbane from December 2-5 — in doubt.

The women’s Australian Open is now a cosanction­ed event with the LPGA Tour and the likelihood of the world’s biggest stars quarantini­ng for a fortnight to contest a four-day event would seem slim.

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