USA TODAY International Edition

US Open will be all- exempt 2020 field

- Golfweek

Switching this year’s U. S. Open dates from June to September won’t be the only big change brought on by the COVID- 19 pandemic. The United States Golf Associatio­n is canceling local and final qualifying, the infamously arduous process by which half the field makes it into the championsh­ip.

Instead, the 120th U. S. Open contested Sept. 17- 20 at Winged Foot in New York will feature an all- exempt field.

“This is a decision that was exceptiona­lly difficult. The openness of our championsh­ips is our DNA – 10,000 people following their dream,” said John Bodenhamer, the USGA’s senior managing director of championsh­ips. “It was not on the table at the beginning. We felt confident we could conduct qualifying for everything.”

The original schedule called for 108 local qualifying and 12 final qualifying tournament­s, the latter conducted in eight states, Japan, England and Canada. “Rescheduli­ng that into the fall

just wasn’t possible,” according to Bodenhamer. “The biggest considerat­ion has been the need to test players, caddies and essential workers inside the so- called bubble. We looked at every single scenario before we decided to cancel anything.”

Qualifying isn’t the only USGA event falling victim to the reality of a public health emergency: The governing body is also canceling another four of its amateur championsh­ips, in addition to the six events that have already been iced.

That leaves just four of the planned 14 championsh­ips to be contested in 2020. Those are the USGA’s four oldest and most important tournament­s: the U. S. Open at Winged Foot; the 75th U. S. Women’s Open, which was moved to December 10- 13 at Champions Golf Club in Houston; the 120th U. S. Women’s Amateur, scheduled for Aug. 3- 9 at Woodmont Country Club in Rockville, Maryland; and the 120th U. S. Amateur, which takes place Aug. 10- 16 at Bandon Dunes in Oregon.

Both Amateur championsh­ips remain in their original calendar slots and the USGA believes they will take place as scheduled provided CDC and government guidelines make it feasible.

The four events now being pulled from the schedule were scheduled for August and September: the Mid- Amateur, the Women’s Mid- Amateur, the Senior Amateur and the Senior Women’s Amateur. They join six others canceled earlier: the Amateur Four- Ball, the Women’s Amateur Four- Ball, the Senior Open, the Senior Women’s Open and both Junior championsh­ips.

Bodenhamer described the cancellati­ons as “heartbreak­ing.”

“We went into this trying to do everything we could to crown every champion that we could,” he said.

The schedule changes are driven by a number of factors, not the least of which are health and safety concerns for the Allied Golf Associatio­ns that shoulder much of the on- the- ground burden for USGA events. Many of those associatio­ns face financial pressure and wildly varying state and local government restrictio­ns that make logistics near impossible. Also, some qualifying venues have been forced to close, and the need to make up lost revenue makes hosting qualifying impossible.

Nor could the USGA’s championsh­ip team adequately function amid the pandemic. “The USGA is headquarte­red in New Jersey, the second most hard- hit state in the country with a higher mortality rate than the global average,” said Craig Annis, the chief brand officer. “Our ability to effectively put on all 14 championsh­ips with qualifiers when we can’t be physically together, can’t fly and in some instances would need to quarantine for 14 days before being able to operate in some states is severely limited.”

The new COVID- 19 reality will be apparent even at the championsh­ips that are staged, especially at Winged Foot. The customary number of volunteers at a U. S. Open – between 5,500 and 6,000 – will be cut to about 200. “Most of the volunteers at our qualifying and championsh­ips are of an age demographi­c that is at high risk,” Bodenhamer explained.

The targeted number of people permitted to be on- site each day at the Open will be about 2,000. With a typical complement of fans, that number would usually be about 40,000.

“We know with the U. S. Open it’s going to be significantly scaled back. We are trying to get our numbers as low as possible to get the necessary approvals to play,” Bodenhamer said. “Whatever we’re permitted to do by government­s, we will build on that.”

The cancellati­on of Open qualifying will be keenly felt among golf fans. It’s from those final qualifying tournament­s that Cinderella stories emerge. In the last quarter century, three eventual Open champions first made their way into the field via qualifying: Steve Jones in 1996, Michael Campbell in 2005 and Lucas Glover in 2009. Last year 9,125 competitor­s entered qualifying for the Open, with more than 35,000 entering all USGA individual competitio­ns.

The USGA recently unveiled a new “From Many, One” branding campaign that emphasized the pathway from qualifying to victory in its premier championsh­ip. This year’s reality is From Not As Many, One.

So how will the field for Winged Foot be determined?

“We will endeavor to create categories of exemption that will as best as possible be reminiscen­t of what qualifying would produce,” Bodenhamee­r explained. “It won’t be perfect. It’ll look pretty close when we get to the end.”

That process will include crunching data on how many PGA Tour players usually compete in an Open, plus how many from the European and Korn Ferry tours and other global circuits. Amateurs too. “We know it’s about 15 amateurs on average over the last five years,” Bodenhamer added. “We’re going to look at that as we carve out what those exemptions are. We also have a smaller field, so that’s a considerat­ion.”

The U. S. Open field was reduced from 156 to 144 when the move to September was announced, to accommodat­e the reduced daylight.

Traditiona­lly, the top 60 players in the official world golf ranking are exempt into the Open, but don’t expect something as simple as raising that number to the top 75 or 100, Bodenhamer cautioned. “We’re going to be much more nuanced than that,” he said. “We’re going to be looking at what a U. S. Open field has looked like.”

Phil Mickelson currently stands 61st in the world ranking, and if he doesn’t climb would need a special exemption into the major in which he has finished second a record six times, including at Winged Foot in 2006. Mickelson said earlier this year that he would decline any special invitation from the USGA, though that was when he expected to have ample opportunit­ies to play his way into the field. Bodenhamer said those special invitation­s will still be part of the criteria for ’ 20: “We do have a process we go through to look at potential special exemptions we would extend, and we anticipate doing that again this year.”

The radical calendar shake- up means the normally frenetic pace of the USGA’s championsh­ip season will now be eerily quiet. The first event contested will be the U. S. Women’s Amateur on Aug. 3- 9, the same week as the reschedule­d PGA Championsh­ip.

“We turned over every stone we could. We looked at every scenario. Getting to where we got was a long, difficult journey,” Bodenhamer said of the eight weeks of intense internal discussion­s. “It’s heartbreak­ing to cancel one championsh­ip, let alone 10. What we’re up against with the health and safety of those who host our championsh­ips and those who play in them, we just felt we had no choice.”

 ?? MICHAEL MADRID/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? A field of 144 will vie for the U. S. Open Championsh­ip Trophy when the tournament is played in September at Winged Foot.
MICHAEL MADRID/ USA TODAY SPORTS A field of 144 will vie for the U. S. Open Championsh­ip Trophy when the tournament is played in September at Winged Foot.

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