National Golf Foundation: Less than half of U.S. golf courses remain open

The National Golf Foundation says 44 percent of U.S. golf courses are still open, a two percent drop from the previous week’s report.

Golfers and fans alike got a much-needed boost of morale when the powers that be announced a revised schedule for the rest of 2020 that featured three major championships, including the Masters in November.

That said, it’s not all good news in our section of the sports world.

According to a new report from the National Golf Foundation, 44 percent of golf courses are still allowing play across the nation (as of the end of last week), a two percent drop from the previous week’s report.

Off the course, retail numbers took a hit, as well. From the report: “approximately 20 percent of independent and regional retailers (doors) are open, down from 35 percent last week. From an overall square footage perspective, only 4 percent of total off-course golf specialty space is now open to in-store traffic, down from 8 percent in the previous polling.”

Coronavirus golf course closures as of April 11, 2020. (National Golf Foundation)

For more information and data visualizations, including a look at several state overviews, visit www.thengfq.com/covid-19.

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Jim Nantz isn’t throwing himself a Masters pity party with a side of pimento cheese

CBS’s Jim Nantz knows he should’ve been broadcasting the NCAA men’s basketball title game and Masters this week, the best week of his year.

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Jim Nantz doesn’t want your pity.

He’s heard from so many people who are wondering how he is coping with not playing a vital role in how we experience March Madness and what would have been the 84th playing of the Masters this week at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia.

It would have been Nantz’s 35th straight year calling the action at the Masters. He usually goes straight from calling the NCAA men’s title game on Monday night to the grounds of Augusta, where he traditionally makes a pilgrimage to the 12th hole and has one of his “board of director meetings” and takes stock of his life.

Hoops on Monday to hosting the green jacket ceremony in Butler Cabin on Sunday evening is arguably the best back-to-back sporting event lineup a play-by-play commentator could hope to do, and it has become part of the fabric of Nantz’s life as the longtime voice of CBS Sports. But not this year due to the events being canceled – March Sadness – and postponed – what’s April without the Masters?

“This has got to be killing you, right?” I asked.

“You know what?” he said. “I’ve got perspective. So many people have it much, much worse than I do. Of course, I’m missing calling some of the games I love. As a sports fan, we all long for those days and waiting for it to get back to normal. But no one should be feeling sorry for me right now. I’m at home and surrounded by my family and we’re all healthy. We sit back and we’re much more concerned about bigger things going on in the world right now.”

Nantz, 60, had to know this question was coming, but somehow it didn’t feel like a canned answer. For one, he is a voracious reader and an astute observer of current events. He understands how the coronavirus pandemic has dug its tentacles into the world we live in and reshaped life as we know it. He’s been sheltered in place at his home in Pebble Beach, California, going for long walks where he doesn’t see another soul, past the construction at the Peter Hay Par-3 course, where Tiger Woods’ design company is re-imagining the layout, and got to share daughter Finley’s sixth birthday at home on March 14 rather than miss it while calling the action at the Big 10 Championship.

But the more we talked, the more you could hear the pain in his voice rise to the surface.

“Do I find myself going through a little bit of a time warp thinking about where I’d be at this very moment? Yes. I struggled with it hard during the NCAA Tournament, especially early, the concept of this is where I would be at this moment instead of being in the present,” he said. “I realized pretty quickly into this lockdown, which began for us on March 19, that my family needs me to be present and not being mentally somewhere I cannot be.”

Yes, Nantz wonders who would’ve had their one shining moment and what unforgettable script the golf gods had in store for us at Augusta, but he’s also convinced that this too shall pass and the games we love will return.

“We’ll see them again and it will be a wonderful and glorious thing when we can,” he said. “Right now, I’m more concerned how can we get through this, how soon can we get through this and how is our world being affected? Our hearts are heavy for those who have suffered losses.”

And what will a Masters in November be like?

“I think it will be so uplifting for people,” he said. “Just having it up there on the schedule brings us hope and that’s what we need right now.”

I joked with Nantz that if he has a conflict with calling an NFL game on Nov. 15, the re-scheduled date for Sunday’s final round of the Masters, that I’d be happy to fill in.

His voice assumed the tone of a man who wished he could reach over, put me in a headlock and give me a noogie for even proposing such a preposterous thing. His response left no doubt: “I’ll be in Augusta,” he said. “Don’t you worry.”

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Arnold Palmer Cup postponed to December, relocated to U.S. venue due to coronavirus

The 2020 Arnold Palmer Cup has been postponed until December 21-23 and will be played at Bay Hill Lodge & Club in Orlando.

In light of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Arnold Palmer Cup originally scheduled for July 3-5 at Lahinch Golf Club in Ireland, will be postponed and rescheduled for December 21-23, 2020.

The competition also has shifted and will take place at Arnold Palmer’s Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando, which hosted the inaugural playing of the Arnold Palmer Cup in 1997. Lahinch Golf Club will now host in 2024.

“We look forward to welcoming the top men and women collegiate golfers to Bay Hill,” said Amy Palmer Saunders. “My father would have wanted to find a way to honor their excellence in these unprecedented times and hosting the rescheduled Arnold Palmer Cup at Bay Hill will be a fitting way to do so. While we are disappointed not to visit Lahinch this summer, we are thrilled that Lahinch has agreed to host in 2024.”

The annual Ryder Cup-style competition features 12 male and female collegiate players from the United States against their International counterparts. Renowned for having been the winter home of Arnold Palmer, Bay Hill has been home to the PGA Tour’s Arnold Palmer Invitational since 1979. Arnold Palmer Cup alumni Francesco Molinari (2019) and Matt Every (2014-15) have claimed victory at Mr. Palmer’s tournament.

Padraig McInerney, tournament director at Lahinch Golf Club stated that “the postponement of this year’s Arnold Palmer Cup is perfectly understandable amidst this current pandemic. While it is a great disappointment for Lahinch Golf Club, its members and the entire local community we remain fully committed to the event and the wonderful concept of honoring young, talented golfers and, in doing so, providing them with the opportunity to experience international competition over some of the world’s great courses. We offer our congratulations to those honored with selection in 2020 and look forward to continuing our relationship with the Arnold & Winnie Palmer Foundation, college golf and to hosting the 2024 Arnold Palmer Cup.”

The final selection of team members was announced on March 27, but even then the growing coronavirus threat presented great concern for the viability of the matches. The guidance of leading public health authorities will dictate any further changes to the schedule.

Coronavirus: Secret Golf Match Play Series announced for PGA Tour downtime

At a time when the world is starved for fresh golf content, Secret Golf plans to release up to six matches between PGA Tour pros.

With professional golf tournaments around the world on hiatus due to concerns of COVID-19, former PGA champion Steve Elkington and his partners have dreamed up a modern-day version of Shell’s Wonderful World of Golf to bring golf fans the fresh content they crave.

It’s called the Secret Golf Match Play Series for COVID-19 Relief and it will consist of up to six matches that will be played prior to the continuation of the PGA Tour season. The matches are expected to be shown on television – negotiations are ongoing and event production is pending discussions with the PGA Tour – and streamed via the Internet to a global audience along with a companion app that includes exclusive behind the scenes and interactive content to enhance the viewing experience as the competition unfolds.

Among those PGA Tour stars committed to partake in the stroke-play matches are Secret Golf regulars Marc Leishman (World No. 15), Jason Dufner, Russell Knox, Andrew Landry, Ryan Palmer and Pat Perez. Each has been allowed to challenge a player of their choice to face them that may not be on its roster of more than 30 tour pros, male and female. (Potential women Secret Golf ambassadors include Stacy Lewis, Brittany Lincicome and Gerina Piller.)

The initial matchups will be named at a later date, Elkington said, along with the courses, but they will all be at private venues that are closed to the public. Players will wear microphones as they talk, interact and informally educate fans about the shots they are going to hit and just hit. Prepare for plenty of trash talk.

“There are levels of trash talk,” Elkington said. “There are guys who make a lot of noise like Pat Perez and those who are more discreet and pick their spot. Jason Dufner is a real quiet and stoic guy, but in our group you can’t shut him up. It just depends who his audience is. He’s like a parrot that never talks when you ask him to talk.”

As for the stakes?

“Pride mostly,” Elkington said. “The scorecard is a big thing for these guys, but could they be making some side bets for added charity money? I wouldn’t put it past them.”

(Video courtesy Secret Golf.)

The players will carry their own bags, and players, crew and commentators numbering less than 10 in total will follow all safe distancing guidelines advised by the CDC. Elkington will provide on-course commentary and color throughout the match, and Diane Knox will conduct pre-during-post round interviews and provide social media support throughout the event.

“We’re going to ham it up,” Elkington said. “You never get to hear what the Tour player is thinking right after he hits a shot. We’re going to ask them what happened – good or bad?”

The PGA Tour canceled the Players Championship after the opening round on March 12 and later canceled or postponed all tournaments through May 17. All of the Secret Golf matches are expected to be released while the Tour’s schedule is suspended. (It is tentatively scheduled to resume with the Charles Schwab Championship, beginning May 21.)

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“We huddled and felt we needed to do something to help people of all ages at grave risk from the virus. We did not at the time know what to do, but we knew it would be important to offer hope and maybe some ways to show golf fans how to be safe, and maybe offer up something to help everyone get by as we are virtually in quarantine,” event organizers said in a release. “Our events had to be charity based, fall under the guides of the CDC, and be highly sensitive of how the country’s health was as a whole before we would release our matches.”

“When we see the virus flatten, see positive trend statistics support very positive change, and diligently listen to CDC guidance we will at that time make a decision and begin to release the series,” said Vito Palermo, a founding partner of Secret Golf.

Proceeds from these events will go to the charitable foundations of participating players as well as the United Way Pandemic Relief Fund.

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PGA Tour revised schedule

In an attempt to salvage a season severely disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic, golf’s leaders released details of a revised schedule Monday with the British Open being canceled altogether and a shift in dates for the remaining three majors. The …

In an attempt to salvage a season severely disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic, golf’s leaders released details of a revised schedule Monday with the British Open being canceled altogether and a shift in dates for the remaining three majors.

The Masters, which was supposed to be played this week at Augusta National Golf Club, has been re-scheduled for Nov. 9-15 in Augusta, Georgia.

Instead, the PGA Championship will become the season’s first major. It is still expected to be contested at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco and has been pushed back to Aug. 6-9. The PGA had been played in mid-August for many years before relocating to May last year as part of a schedule change to finish the season before football began. To accommodate the PGA, the Wyndham Championship has shifted back one week to Aug 13-16, and the trio of FedEx Cup playoff events have also been delayed one week, with the Tour Championship in Atlanta now scheduled for Sept 4-7.

The U.S. Open, which was originally to be held at Winged Foot in Mamaroneck, New York from June 15-18, will now be played Sept. 17-20, the week before the Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin, which remains intact.

“It’s a crazy puzzle,” PGA Tour pro Graeme McDowell said in late March. “I can’t imagine how much time the tours have spent figuring out a Plan A, Plan B, Plan C, Plan D.”

The R&A announced it has canceled the 149th British Open, scheduled for July 16-19 at Royal St. George’s in England. It will be played there the week of July 11-18, 2021. The 150th Open will be played at St Andrews from 10-17 July 2022.

“Like everybody I’m very sad and disappointed that the R&A has canceled The Open,” reigning champion Shane Lowry said in a video tweet. “You can trust me when I say the Claret Jug is going to be in safe hands for another year.”

The PGA Tour canceled the Players Championship after the opening round on March 12 and later canceled or postponed all tournaments through the PGA Championship, which originally was supposed to be played May 14-17.

The Tour did not confirm whether there would be any further postponements. As of now, the season is expected to resume with the Charles Schwab Championship, May 21-24, but it did state in the joint release that it will seek to reschedule tournaments into the weeks formerly occupied by the U.S. Open, The Open Championship and the Men’s Olympic golf competition in June and July. The Tour will make further announcements about this potential, as well as its fall schedule, in the coming weeks.

“This is a difficult and challenging time for everyone coping with the effects of this pandemic. We remain very mindful of the obstacles ahead, and each organization will continue to follow the guidance of the leading public health authorities, conducting competitions only if it is safe and responsible to do so,” golf’s governing bodies and tours said in a joint statement. “In recent weeks, the global golf community has come together to collectively put forward a calendar of events that will, we hope, serve to entertain and inspire golf fans around the world.  We are grateful to our respective partners, sponsors and players, who have allowed us to make decisions – some of them, very tough decisions – in order to move the game and the industry forward.

“We want to reiterate that Augusta National Golf Club, European Tour, LPGA, PGA of America, PGA Tour, The R&A and USGA collectively value the health and well-being of everyone, within the game of golf and beyond, above all else. We encourage everyone to follow all responsible precautions and make effort to remain healthy and safe.”

 

 

 

 

2020 Open Championship canceled in wake of coronavirus pandemic

The Open Championship, golf’s final major of 2020, is now off the calendar, canceled by the R&A in wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

First, it was Augusta National postponing the Masters.

Next in the postponement crosshairs was the PGA Championship at San Francisco’s TPC Harding Park. The U.S. Open was then put in jeopardy when an executive order closed Winged Foot, halting all preparations.

The coronavirus outbreak has now reached the doors of Royal St. George’s with the R&A announcing on Monday that the 149th Open Championship has been canceled. The British Open was scheduled for July 16-19, which would have been the final major championship of 2020.

Next year’s Open will be played at Royal St. George’s July 11-18, 2021, so the 150th playing in 2022 will still be held at the Old Course, July 10-17.

The last time the Open was not contested was from 1940-1945 because of World War II. St. Andrews hosted the 1939 Open and then served as host for the return of competition in 1946. The Open was also not held from 1915-1919 due to World War I.

Last week, the R&A and USGA jointly announced the Curtis Cup, a female amateur biennial team match, was being moved back a year from its originally scheduled dates of June 12-14, 2020.

These moves come on the heels of the cancellation of the most important Grand Slam tennis tournament of the year. In a move that had been signaled strongly over the last week, the All England Club canceled Wimbledon for 2020, citing the “likely trajectory” of the coronavirus outbreak in the United Kingdom and the logistical impossibility of setting up the event at a point later in the summer.

It will be the first time Wimbledon hasn’t crowned a champion since the tournament paused between 1940 and 1945 due to World War II.

USA TODAY Sports’ Dan Wolken contributed to this article.

As Mike Whan works through ever-changing LPGA schedule, players weigh heavily on his mind

LPGA commissioner Mike Whan faces an ever-changing puzzle when it comes to his tour’s schedule. His mind remains on the needs of players.

Mike Whan was on his way to the gas station recently, wearing the protective gloves his wife had given him, when the plight of several players came to mind.

He thought about Sierra Brooks, the promising Symetra Tour rookie with grand plans for the LPGA. He thought about LPGA rookie Albane Valenzuela, a former Olympian and Stanford All-American who played three tournaments before the world hit pause. He thought about Mel Reid, the feisty English player who grinded on the Ladies European Tour for years before coming to America.

He thought about them all sitting at home.

“They’ve done all the work to earn this,” Whan said. “They’re there. They’re at this stage. Yeah, it sucks. I feel like we’re letting them down.”

During these unprecedented times, Whan met with the media for the first time via a Zoom video call. Earlier on Friday, his team had released a revised schedule that puts the LPGA back in action on June 15. They’ve been on ice since mid-February, feeling the brunt of the cononavirus earlier than most due to the Asia spring schedule.

“We were COVID before COVID was cool, I guess,” Whan said, “because nobody really knew what coronavirus was back in January when we first started talking to China, Thailand and Singapore about it.”

Back then, when a health minister told Whan that his tour might be put in quarantine if someone at the tournament site tested positive for coronavirus, Whan thought there might be a translation issue. Isn’t quarantine a military thing?

“He goes, ‘No, no, we would actually put you in a hotel for two weeks and then just check temperatures and make sure no one gets sick,’” Whan recalled. “And I’m thinking, can you imagine the LPGA being quarantined in a foreign country?”

Now the word “quarantined” is a part of the global conversation.

One year ago, Whan was boasting to his board about how recession-proof he thought the tour was because of its global diversity. Lightning should’ve struck then, he said, because the idea of a global economic shutdown never entered his mind.

The very thing that fueled the LPGA’s rapid growth these past 10 years might be what ultimately slows down the tour’s recovery.

Whan was part of a meeting via phone with President Donald Trump on Saturday afternoon that included commissioners of all major sports leagues.

Whan said he talks to a formalized task force in golf every couple of days. The pandemic has actually brought the game’s leadership even closer. He wouldn’t mind being the first tour, or even sports league, to host an event, provided that three things are true: 1) local government and gathering restrictions were in the tour’s favor, 2) the health guidelines where they’re playing were in their favor and 3) 75 to 80 percent of the players could get there.

Whan estimates that 35 to 40 percent of his membership is overseas right now.

Part of the reason he announced that four more events are being postponed and one, the Pure Silk Championship at Kingsmill, had been canceled, was to relieve the anxiety of players and caddies who were concerned about getting back into the U.S.

Gemma Dryburgh played twice this season before heading home to Scotland for the indefinite break. She set up a net in her garden to be able to hit balls after the golf courses in her area closed two weeks ago.

The new schedule release, she said, at least gives a more realistic date to aim toward.

“I think one of the hardest things about this situation is that it is hard to motivate yourself when you have no idea when we will play again,” she said.

Azahara Munoz is hunkered down in Florida and grateful that her family back in Spain remains healthy. She’s eager to get back on tour, of course, but only when it’s safe for everyone.

“Not just when it’s good for us,” she said.

As of now, there are four canceled events on the LPGA schedule: three events in Asia and Kingsmill. Whan said there will likely be more. It’s possible that title sponsors will partner up for events later in the season. He doesn’t want to fill every open date on the calendar in case he needs to move another major championship.

Right now, the U.S. Women’s Open has moved to December. It could be the tail end of the season, or if summer events get wiped out, Whan could introduce a wrap-around schedule that goes into 2021. He’s calling it the “year of the asterisk.”

The scenarios seem endless. Some have fans, some don’t. Limited hospitality. Multiple dining rooms or media rooms to cut down on crown size. Safety measures can increase the costs.

“We’ve had a few sponsors say to us, if you need me in 2020, tell me where you need me,” said Whan, “and if I don’t fit, tell me that you just need me to be back in 2021.”

It’s an ever-changing puzzle, and Whan, the compassionate, tireless, outside-the-box-thinking commissioner who turned around the LPGA, won’t rest until he no longer has to worry about his players on his way to the gas station.

But even then, he sees the bigger picture.

“I’ve said this many times: My desire to play golf has never been higher,” said Whan. “My worry about my desire getting in the way of what’s right has to be just as high. We want to play. Don’t get me wrong. And my players want to play, and I think if you said to them, let’s go play, they’d be there before I got there. But we can’t – while we want to be a force of good, we can’t be a force of setback, either.”

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Devastated over ANWA postponement, Paris Hilinski prepares for golf’s return

Paris Hilinski would have made her ANWA debut this week, then the coronavirus hit. She continues to stay sharp, ready for golf’s return.

Only a few weeks ago, Paris Hilinski was preparing for her Augusta National Women’s Amateur debut.

The 16-year-old beamed when she received her invitation in January for the second annual tournament. She knew being included among a select group of women to compete at Augusta National was “the opportunity of a lifetime.”

On March 13, that opportunity to stand alongside the iconic foliage in Augusta, Georgia, with some of the best amateurs in the game was postponed along with the event itself, the Masters and the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Hilinski was devastated.

“I’ve never been more excited than when my (ANWA) invitation arrived and I’ve worked tirelessly to have my best game ready for the incredible opportunity,” she wrote in a post on Instagram. “But as tough as it may be I completely understand and support today’s decision to postpone and prioritize the health and safety of all. While I’ll miss playing competitive golf for awhile, I’m looking forward to time with my family and promise you I’ll be training harder than ever to be ready for what’s next. My passion and love for the game is stronger than it (has) ever been.”

Hilinski, No. 16 on the Golfweek/Sagarin girls junior ranking, is coming off an impressive freshman year. She was the second youngest player at the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur and earned a spot at the 2019 U.S. Women’s Open.

Her accomplishments so far this season include the ANWA invitation and placing third at the ANNIKA Invitational USA in January. She was hoping to build off last year’s experience this spring during the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball and the Women’s British Amateur but her schedule kept taking hits. Shortly after the ANWA was postponed, the USGA canceled all Four-Ball events and the Women’s British Amateur was rescheduled.

While disappointed she won’t play these notable events this spring, Hilinski is grateful for the experiences gained and invitations received. She’s confident they’ll bear fruit in the future despite the delays of COVID-19.

“I learned so much,” she said of the 2019 USGA events. “I think both of those events were such a big playoff so I definitely learned how to play under that kind of pressure. The U.S. Open is a little different than the U.S. Am, but I feel like if I qualified again I would go in so much more prepared than last year.”

Additional cancellations and postponements are expected to pile up as COVID-19 has not yet peaked in the United States. As of Saturday morning, there were more than 276,000 confirmed cases and 7,122 deaths in the United States, according to the New York Times.

The pandemic has understandably impacted Hilinski’s training. The sophomore who splits her time between her birthplace of Los Angeles and Palm Beach, Florida, said she usually practices several hours every day, but her trips to courses have become less frequent as the impact of coronavirus becomes more visible.

Currently residing in Palm Beach, Hilinski said she visited her regular courses, the Grove XXIII in Hobe Sound and the Floridian where she’s coached by Claude Harmon III, last week but both she and her parents are nervous about continuing the once routine activity.

“We’re a little concerned because you just keep hearing things on the news about how it’s becoming more and more contagious,” Hilinski said. “So I think they get a little worried and stuff and it’s a little scary because there’s so much unknown.”

In Florida, there were over 10,260 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 169 deaths as of Saturday morning, according to state and local health agencies, hospitals and C.D.C. data. In Palm Beach County alone, there were 856 cases and 33 deaths.

On Wednesday, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis issued a shelter-in-place order which went into effect Friday at 12:01 a.m. ET. The order lists golf clubs as essential businesses, but the government exemption does not ease Hilinski or her parents.

Hilinski was unsure if she will continue to practice at the golf clubs as the confirmed cases and death toll across Florida continue to rise.

“I’m taking it day-by-day just because stuff is changing day-by-day,” she said.

Despite her youth, Hilinski understands the severity of the pandemic and why cancellations and postponements of events around world like graduations and tournaments continue to pile up. Everyone is making sacrifices for their own health and for the health of their communities — herself included.

Hilinski has committed to flattening the curve by adjusting her practice schedule while self-isolating at home.

Junior golfer Paris Hilinski. (Mpu Dinani)

With health and safety her top priorities, Hilinski has found indoor drills and workouts and has a putting mat in her garage. The routine, however altered it may be, comforts Hininski and is a testament to the hope she has in the midst of the rising chaos and uncertainty.

“Playing golf gives me a sense of comfort,” she said. “It’s something I look forward to doing everyday. I feel at peace on the golf course. There is something special about golf, even if you are just hitting into a net in your backyard.”

There will be a time when the virus passes and play resumes.

Whenever that may be, Hilinski will be ready.

“Right now I’m focused on the heath and safety of my loved ones and trying to be the best player and person I can be when golf gets going again,” she said.

Playing golf felt safer than cruising the grocery store

As with most courses in Florida, the Black course at Streamsong Resort is open for play but with safety precautions due to the coronavirus.

BOWLING GREEN, Fla. – I’ve had first-tee starters tell me about the opening tee shot, about the history of the course I’m about to play, about any quirks I might anticipate during the upcoming round.

Until Thursday, I never had a first-tee starter stress the importance of social distancing. Or washing hands. Or following other CDC advisories while playing 18. But that was the kickoff to my first taste of golf during the full-blown coronavirus pandemic.

As with most courses in Florida, the Black course at Streamsong Resort – southwest of Orlando, east of Tampa and not too close to anything else – is open for play. Employing several strategies to keep players away from each other while still allowing for several hours in the sun, the highly ranked golf destination is determined to keep at least 18 of its 54 holes open as long as possible.

“We’re being very careful, and social distancing is critical,” said Jim Bullock, Streamsong’s director of sales and marketing.We take the care of our guests and our staff very seriously, so we’re going down that path but still trying to create an opportunity for people to get outside in this big ballpark and enjoy the outdoors.”

Following several weeks later than many counties and municipalities in the Sunshine State, Governor Ron DeSantis this week issued a statewide stay-at-home order that began Friday. That order didn’t mandate the closure of golf courses. But while Streamsong is doing as many as 100 rounds some days on the Black course, the resort’s 216-room lodge shut down April 2 until May 1, with most of its employees furloughed. Several of the employees of the golf operations openly expressed appreciation to still be working, even if in a limited capacity.

The resort’s Red and Blue courses are closed, both having their greens resurfaced. The regrassing plan introduced last year was for the Blue to be closed in 2020 for resurfacing, followed by the Red in 2021. But with play and travel being limited by coronavirus concerns, the resort condensed the schedule to get both courses regrassed for an October reopening.

Streamsong has flipped the cups upside down in the holes, which prevents a ball from falling all the way into the hole, on its Black course. (Jason Lusk/Golfweek)

Like so many people, I’d been holed up in a home office for weeks. A couple nightly walks with my family through my Central Florida neighborhood had provided a little exercise, but with the National Golf Foundation having reported this week that 74 percent of golf courses (season permitting) are open across the United States, I wanted to see how golf in this era of sickness and concern measures up to what we normally experience on course.

Simply put, the golf was golf, enjoyable as ever. Streamsong’s three courses rank as Nos. 2 (Red course), 3 (Black) and 4 (Blue) in the state on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access tracks, and it’s always a blast to play any of them. But much of the rest of the experience – travel to the course, walking through a clubhouse, even using a caddie – had a very different feel.

Most different was a general feeling that perhaps we shouldn’t be doing this. We all have been advised to stay home. Should I risk my health and more importantly that of others just to play golf? It’s a fair question. I was determined to take every precaution possible to make it as safe an experience as possible.

I recruited two friends who likewise had been holed up at home to join me, making the 90-minute drive to Streamsong from the Orlando area in separate cars to keep our distance. We would walk the course to avoid coming into contact with the golf carts – Streamsong is always best enjoyed on foot anyway.

The employees at Streamsong, from the greeter in the parking lot to assistant pro at the check-in desk, have been instructed to avoid physical contact and promote social distancing – no valet, no handshakes, no carrying a player’s clubs from the trunk to the bag stand. Even the caddies no longer carry a player’s bag. Instead, players can take a walking caddie who serves as a guide without carrying the sticks. The resort also has expanded options to ride, with only one player per cart to keep people farther apart.

The extent to which the staff was working to keep people from touching anything was commendable. The doors to the pro shop were propped open. Scorecards had been removed from the first-tee starter’s stand to prevent people from reaching into the box. Even a handful of tees had been scattered across the ground by a gloved employee so that a string of players didn’t need to reach into a pile of tees. I made it through arrival and check-in with nothing but the soles of my shoes coming into contact with anything.

Tees are sprinkled on the ground of the first tee at Streamsong’s Black course to keep players from reaching into a box to retrieve them. (Jason Lusk/Golfweek)

After teeing off, it was easy to keep our distance. Our caddie, Nicky, was mindful to stay back. The biggest congestion points are tee boxes, but even there it’s possible to maintain a 6-foot buffer if you try.

Some courses have used pool noodles to prevent players from reaching into the hole to retrieve a ball. Streamsong instead has turned its cups upside down in the hole so that a ball never falls entirely beneath ground level. Flagsticks are to be left in the cup at all times, and a player can easily retrieve a ball with two fingers, never touching the pin.

Streamsong has instituted a policy of using only every other tee time on the sheet, so groups have plenty of distance between each other. I’m sure it’s possible that at some point my friends and I broke the advised 6-foot social distancing barrier, but if so, it wasn’t by much. No high-fives, no fist bumps, no sharing gear. We weren’t each in a totally protective bubble, but we weren’t invading each other’s space.

The clubhouse at Streamsong’s Black course is open for takeout only. (Golfweek/Jason Lusk)

All in all, playing 18 seemed safer than walking through my neighborhood in the evening – I certainly came in contact with fewer people. I definitely was farther away from anyone than I would be in even the most coronavirus-conscious grocery store.

Was the choice to play golf the absolute safest option? No, probably not. Staying at home would be safer. Would I consider it a dangerous option? I’m not an epidemiologist and my opinion shouldn’t count for much, but the way we played felt pretty safe. With so much wide-open space, most of the round was a respite from coronavirus concerns.

From the planning stages, my biggest worry was the travel to and from the course. Fortunately for us, Streamsong was easily within range on a tankful of gas. I didn’t have to stop on the way there or the way home, so I was in my own little cocoon on the road. Any stops certainly would have raised the risk level.

All in all, it was a beautiful round of golf with a few concerns that were greatly alleviated by the staff at Streamsong. It was different, but in the end, it was golf. And that was all I could ask for in these troubling times.

LPGA releases revised schedule, pushes back restart date to June

The LPGA canceled the next five events on its schedule due to the threat of novel coronavirus and is now on hold until June.

The LPGA is on hold now until June. The tour announced on Friday that the next five events on its schedule have either been postponed or canceled due to the coronavirus crisis. Next up if all goes as planned: the Walmart NW Arkansas Championship June 19-21 in Rogers.

The tour hasn’t staged an event since mid-February. Two of the top three players in the world, Jin Young Ko and Sung Hyun Park, have yet to compete in 2020.

The LPGA laid out its new schedule through September, noting several open weeks for events that had been previously postponed.

The first major of the year now would be the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship, held June 25-28 at Aronimink Golf Club in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania.

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The last major of the year will be the U.S. Women’s Open, which moved to Dec. 10-13. The championship will now be played over two courses for the first time in event history. Both the Cypress Creek and Jackrabbit courses will be used for the championship.

“The Jackrabbit course is really good!” said Stacy Lewis. “It’s tighter off the tee, smaller greens. I’ve played it more than (Cypress Creek). Could be cold and wet weather-wise, but I think we have to do all we can to play as many tournaments as possible this year.”

The new Pelican Women’s Championship in Belleair, Florida, originally scheduled for May 14-17, will now take place Nov. 12-15. The ShopRite LPGA Classic in Atlantic City, New Jersey, originally scheduled for May 29-31, will move to July 31-Aug. 2. The Meijer LPGA Classic in Grand Rapids, Michigan, originally scheduled for June 11-14, is looking to reschedule.

The Pure Silk Championship at Kingsmill, scheduled for May 21-24, won’t be played again until 2021.

“We are so thankful to all our partners for their flexibility and willingness to work with us during this very difficult time,” said LPGA Commissioner Mike Whan. “This has been a truly collective effort to reschedule tournament dates and work together to provide LPGA players with as many playing opportunities as possible once it is safe for us to resume competing again. As we watch the world come together in this battle against this virus, we are so thankful for all of the support from our valued partners and we continue to wish for the health and safety of all the extended members of our global LPGA family.”

The Kia Classic, which was scheduled to take place in March, will now be held Sept. 24-27 in Carlsbad, California, just after the ANA Inspiration and Cambia Portland Classic.

Should the events in June be pushed back as well, the tour said alternative dates are available. The LPGA is scheduled to be in Asia for four weeks in October and November.

The CME Group Tour Championship wasn’t mentioned in the tour’s release, but it would make sense for it to follow the USWO in Naples, Florida.

LPGA revised 2020 summer schedule

Date Event and location
June 19-21 Walmart NW Arkansas Championship presented by P&G
Pinnacle C.C., Rogers, Arkansas
June 25-28* KPMG Women’s PGA Championship
Aronimink G.C., Newtown Square, Pennsylvania
July 2-5 OPEN FOR TOURNAMENT RESCHEDULE
July 9-12 Marathon LPGA Classic presented by Dana
Highland Meadows G.C., Sylvania, Ohio
July 15-18 Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational
Midland C.C., Midland, Michigan
July 23-26 OPEN FOR TOURNAMENT RESCHEDULE
July 31 – Aug. 2 ShopRite LPGA Classic presented by Acer
Seaview, A Dolce Hotel (Bay Course), Galloway, New Jersey
Aug. 6-9* The Evian Championship
Evian Resort G.C., Evian-les-Bains, France
Aug. 13-16 Aberdeen Standard Investments Ladies Scottish Open
The Renaissance Club, North Berwick, Scotland
Aug. 20-23* AIG Women’s British Open
Royal Troon G.C., Troon, Scotland
Aug. 27-30 UL International Crown
Sept. 3-6 CP Women’s Open
Shaughnessy G. and C.C., Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Sept. 10-13* ANA Inspiration
Mission Hills C.C., Rancho Mirage, California
Sept. 17-20 Cambia Portland Classic
Columbia Edgewater C.C., Portland, Oregon
Sept. 24-27 Kia Classic
Aviara G.C., Carlsbad, California

* indicates major championship

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