The Standard (St. Catharines)

Canada’s Mackenzie Tour is waiting for border to reopen as golfers start hitting courses

- JOHN CHIDLEY-HILL THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — Golf may be returning to Canada soon, but the nation’s profession­al tour is still waiting to see what happens next.

Scott Pritchard, executive director of the Mackenzie Tour, says that, although golf courses are opening up on a provinceby-province basis, until the border between the United States and Canada is reopened, the lower-tier pro circuit is on hold.

“When you consider that a large number of players that play on the Mackenzie Tour are based not only in the U.S. but also a significan­t number are internatio­nal players, it brings some uncertaint­y in terms of what we’re going to be able to pull off this season,” said Pritchard, who added there are several scenarios where the Mackenzie Tour will have tournament­s in 2020.

“Until we have clarity, not only about the border but also the quarantine rules and what that’s going to look like, we’re just waiting,” he said.

The Mackenzie Tour season was supposed to kick off May 28 with the Canada Life Open at Seymour Golf and Country Club in Vancouver.

But the Canada Life Open, and the next six events through to the Windsor Championsh­ip on July 16 at Ambassador Golf Club in Windsor, Ont., have been postponed.

The top-flight PGA Tour is holding two charity events in May and a true resume of play is expected June 11 with the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.

The second-tier Korn Ferry Tour is scheduled to return on the same date with the Korn Ferry Challenge at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., but there’s no start date for the Mackenzie Tour just yet.

Pritchard says that’s an advantage,

“It brings some uncertaint­y in terms of what we’re going to be able to pull off this season.”

however. “We feel well positioned, specifical­ly in golf, to adhere to any of the policies and procedures (for COVID-19) in order to operate a safe event in a safe environmen­t,” he said. “We’ll also have the best practices and key learnings from both the PGA Tour and the Korn Ferry Tour. We’ll be able to take a lot of the key learnings from those two events and implement them into our events at the appropriat­e time.”

Ontario became the latest province to relax restrictio­ns on its courses when it announced Thursday that golfers would be able to start teeing off this weekend.

Still, there are other obstacles for the Mackenzie Tour to overcome. Waiting for the Canadian border to reopen to non-essential travel is the biggest hurdle, but there are other factors at play including regulation­s on quarantine­s, travel between provinces and municipal regulation­s.

Toronto’s decision to cancel all event permits for most of the summer was a nail in the coffin of the PGA Tour’s RBC Canadian Open, which has since been cancelled for the first time since the Second World War. Similarly, the Shaw Charity Classic, a Champions Tour event scheduled for late August, is also in danger after the City of Calgary cancelled all of its event permits up to Aug. 31.

Pritchard says the Mackenzie Tour has been in contact with all levels of government and continues to monitor the situation.

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