PGA Tour cancels John Deere Classic, per source

The John Deere Classic, which was to be held in July, is the latest casualty on the PGA Tour schedule.

Golfweek has learned that the PGA Tour’s John Deere Classic will not be held this year.

The tournament was scheduled for July 9-12 at TPC Deere Run in Silvis, Illinois, and would have been the fifth event played in the Tour’s revamped schedule. The first four events, beginning May 21 at the Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas, will not be allowing fans.

Sources tell Golfweek that John Deere Co., didn’t want to have fans at the popular Quad Cities event and risk a possible outbreak of coronavirus at a large gathering.

“They felt if we don’t have fans it’s just a TV show and that’s not what the tournament is about,” said a PGA Tour insider who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he wasn’t at liberty to speak on the subject. “They’d rather take the money they’d be allocating to the tournament and give it to the community.”

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But the Tour is working on contingency plans to fill the gap in the schedule. While sources say nothing has been definitively decide, the Barbasol Championship, which is scheduled as an opposite field event one week after the John Deere at Keene Trace Golf Club in Nicholasville, Kentucky, could jump into the opening. The Barbasol has a $3.5 million purse compared to the $6.2 million that was supposed to be offered at the John Deere Classic.

Efforts to reach JDC tournament director Clair Peterson were not returned at the time of publication.

This year’s tournament would have marked the 50th anniversary of the John Deere Classic.

It’s the 11th Tour event that has been canceled due to the global coronavirus pandemic.

WATCH: PGA Tour set to re-start in June with Charles Schwab Challenge

The PGA Tour is bringing real-life sports back to TV starting in June.

The PGA Tour is planning to bring real-life sports back to TV starting in June.

The Tour released its re-tooled schedule through the end of 2020 on Thursday, starting with the Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas, June 11-14.

That event, plus the three that follow — the RBC Heritage, the Travelers Championship and the Rocket Mortgage Classic — all will be closed to the public. The first event that is expected to include spectators (for now, at least) is the John Deere Classic, scheduled for July 9-12 in Silvis, Illinois.

A statement from the PGA Tour on Thursday said it “will continue to monitor the situation and follow the recommendations of local and state authorities in order to determine the most appropriate on-site access in each market.”

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