The Star Malaysia

Not quite a moon shot as PGA Tour unveils Japan event

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TOKYO: The US PGA Tour announced a six-year deal for an official tournament in Japan from next year, to be sponsored by a company whose CEO has signed up to orbit the moon.

The inaugural US$9.75mil (RM41mil) Zozo Championsh­ip will be played from Oct 24-27 at Narashino Country Club in Chiba, part of the PGA Tour’s three-event Asian swing.

Yusaku Maezawa is CEO of online fashion retailer Zozo.

He recently became the first paying passenger to ante up for a moon orbit on Elon Musk’s rocket ship.

Back on earth, the Japan Tour stop for all intents and purposes replaces the CIMB Classic, which has been scrapped after nine years on the schedule in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

“CIMB is realigning its sponsorshi­p with the Tour,” the PGA Tour said in a press release yesterday that raised more questions than it answered.

The Zozo Championsh­ip will feature a 78-man field comprising 60 from the PGA Tour, 10 from the Japan Tour (JGTO) and eight special exemptions, the PGA Tour announced at a press conference in Tokyo.

The event will be co-sanctioned with the Japan Tour.

It will fall between the CJ Cup @Nine Bridges in South Korea and the World Golf Championsh­ips-HSBC Champions tournament in Shanghai.

JGTO president Isao Aoki, the first Japanese player to win on the PGA Tour, said he wondered if he would live to see the day when the Americanba­sed organisati­on planted its flag in Japan. “I’m 76 years old. Finally this day has come,” said Aoki, who won the 1983 Hawaiian Open. “I wish this day had come earlier.

“This is a great opportunit­y to promote the Japan Golf Tour.

“I’m very emotional about having this big tournament in Japan.”

The media launch was also attended by Zozo founder and CEO Maezawa and Japanese No. 1 Hideki Matsuyama.

Maezawa’s trip around the moon is tentativel­y scheduled for 2023.

He has bought all six seats on the SpaceX Big Falcon Rocket.

Yesterday, he demurred when asked whether Matsuyama would be one of his invited guests.

“I’d love to go, if asked,” Matsuyama said.

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