New Tour schedule aims to play Masters in November, keep Ryder Cup in 2020

Golf’s governing bodies are close to unveiling a new schedule that would see at least three majors and the Ryder Cup contested this year.

After weeks of daily conference calls in a frantic bid to rescue a season crippled by the COVID-19 pandemic, golf’s governing bodies are close to unveiling a new schedule that would see at least three major championships — including the Masters in November — and the Ryder Cup contested this year.

The details of the ambitious revised schedule were outlined to Golfweek by three people close to the discussions, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity since they are not authorized to address the matter publicly.

The planned joint announcement of a new schedule has been delayed while the R&A decides if the 149th Open Championship — slated for July 16-19 at Royal St. George’s in England — will be postponed or canceled entirely. A rescheduled Open would take place at the same venue from Sept. 17-20 — just one week before the Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin. If the R&A opts to cancel, that slot on the calendar could see the U.S. Open played at Winged Foot.

“At this point we are not in a position to confirm any specific dates. While we are hopeful that we will be able to conduct the U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club in June, it is increasingly likely that we will need to postpone,” said Craig Annis, the USGA’s chief brand officer. “We have been working with our broadcast partner Fox Sports, the PGA Tour, and other golf organizations to determine what a viable postponement date could be should we need to make that decision. We are currently considering a number of options and expect to be in a position to announce a decision by next week.”

One of those options under consideration: holding the U.S. Open later in the year on the West coast. The USGA has had initial conversations with two potential venues in California: Torrey Pines near San Diego, which has long been in line to host the Open in ’21, and Pebble Beach, where the ’19 edition was played. Annis acknowledged conversations are underway with several alternate venues and did not rule out a move west.

“Depending on how far out we might have to go it could mean that we need to find a new location. If we get beyond September we would need to find a U.S. Open-ready course in a place with the right climate and agronomics, with consideration to available daylight hours,” he said. “We are fortunate to have a number of USGA host site partners who we are engaging with to determine viability.”

Both Torrey Pines and Pebble Beach have multiple courses on property — a key consideration in getting a full field around for the first two rounds with limited daylight (Pinehurst in North Carolina has also been mooted, though that is considered unlikely.). “Certainly if we had to postpone and if we moved to a slot in the late fall, we would potentially need two courses if the size of the field remains the same,” Annis conceded. “The traditional timing of the U.S. Open allows us to work with maximum daylight hours. Any move away from that would provide daylight challenges for us that we would need to address and playing on two courses could be a way to resolve that challenge.”

The Masters, which was due to begin next week at Augusta National Golf Club, is tentatively penciled in for the week of Nov. 9, according to two people with knowledge of the current planning who spoke on condition of anonymity because they’re not authorized to speak publicly. And what was for so many years the last major of the season is now aiming to be the first: the PGA Championship will be scheduled for Aug. 6-9 at Harding Park in San Francisco.

“Glory’s First Shot” will be followed by the PGA Tour’s Wyndham Championship and then three FedEx Cup playoff events, culminating with the Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta on Labor Day weekend. Early talks included possibly restaging the Players Championship, which was abandoned after just one round last month, but the Tour’s flagship event will not now be part of the new lineup. As things stand, only the Ryder Cup will be played on its original dates.

It’s unclear whether the Tour would seek to begin its 2020-21 wraparound season as usual after the Tour Championship. An announcement on a new LPGA Tour schedule could come as early as this week, while the impact of the revised calendar on the European Tour remains uncertain.

While any refreshed schedule would obviously be subject to change — and complete cancellation, given the rapidly expanding coronavirus crisis — the timeframe targeted to resume the PGA Tour season is mid-June. That could potentially allow the Tour to use the four weeks vacated by the Olympics and the U.S. and British Opens to stage tournaments that were previously postponed. Events currently rostered for that summer period — like the RBC Canadian Open in Toronto, the Travelers Championship in Hartford, Conn., and the WGC-St. Jude Invitational in Memphis, Tenn. — could be impacted, either to facilitate the playing of other stops or because of local conditions.

Another uncertain element is television, with networks faced with finding slots to broadcast golf at a time when they have commitments to other sports (assuming some normalcy has returned to the sporting calendar by then). NBC, CBS, Fox and ESPN all have obligations with the NFL, college football, Premier League soccer and NASCAR, among others. That could mean, for example, that more U.S. Open coverage is aired on Fox Sports 1 rather than Fox’s main network. Fox is contractually obliged to air the championship on its main channel only when it is played in its traditional June date.

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Players and TV commentators react to Tiger Woods sidelined for the Players

Tiger Woods said he is skipping the Players and his fellow competitors and commentators say he’s making a smart move to rest for the Masters

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ORLANDO – The news that back stiffness would prevent Tiger Woods from competing next week threw a wet blanket on the Players Championship in what is perennially the deepest field in golf.

Woods, a two-time Players champ, hasn’t played since hosting the Genesis Invitational last month. He also skipped the WGC-Mexico Championship. Graeme McDowell summed up the thoughts of many pros in the Arnold Palmer Invitational when he said that he was disappointed, but not surprised, to hear the announcement from Woods.

“He’s the X-factor at any tournament,” McDowell said. “You know he’d love to play next week, but he’s on a mission, and that mission is to win another green coat.”

Veteran Tour pros and TV commentators Davis Love III of CBS and Peter Jacobsen of NBC also weighed in from interesting vantage points as pros who have both endured their share of back trouble.

“I get it. When you’re stiff, you’re stiff. If anyone should call him and commiserate, it should be me,” Love said. “You know when you don’t have it. I’m not smart enough to think, ‘If I play I’m going to hurt myself.’ I’m still going to keep going. He’s done that before. Now he realizes, ‘I don’t have a good knee, I don’t have a good back, and I’m going to hurt something else.’ It’s not that he can’t do it, but he doesn’t want to risk getting it worse. You know what he’s thinking – just get me inside the ropes at the Masters and I can win again. I’m sure he’ll tell you, this is cautionary and for protection and not to worry about it. He’ll play when he’s ready to play.”

“I feel badly for the tournament and I feel badly for him, but it’s not surprising to me,” Jacobsen said. “I’ve had back surgeries and I know what it’s like when you get out of a chair and you go try to practice and something tightens and you shut it down. You know in your mind that unless you want to show up and be a celebration type golfer, he shouldn’t be playing. I completely understand it and I applaud him for it. He’s thinking about next week, next month, next year. He can play well like Phil (Mickelson) into his 50s, but he has to measure himself. He has to pick and choose his spots. Anybody can play hurt; nobody can play well hurt. You want to know when you tee it up on No. 1 that you can play and contend for 72 holes.”

CBS lead analyst Nick Faldo shared a similar sentiment in a tweet:

There are three tournaments after the Players that Woods could potentially play: the Valspar Championship, where he finished second in 2018, WGC Dell Match Play, where he lost in the quarterfinals last year, and the Valero Texas Open, where he last played in 1996, his rookie season.

The Masters is scheduled to begin on April 9.

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Lynch: Francesco Molinari hasn’t been the same since Rae’s Creek, but that’s water under the bridge

Francesco Molinari admits 2020 hasn’t started the way he’d like, but he’s planning to build up his game for the Masters.

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ORLANDO — Outwardly at least, the Francesco Molinari who arrived at the Arnold Palmer Invitational on Tuesday was the same guy who left with the trophy a year ago. Same low-key demeanor. Same squat, college wrestler’s body. Same diligent work ethic. Only his results betray the fact that much has changed.

His victory 12 months ago, thanks to a scintillating final-round 64, was the culmination of a run of form that had seen the Italian claim the European Tour’s flagship BMW PGA Championship and the Quicken Loans National on the PGA Tour, before winning his first major at the Open Championship, fending off charges from Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy.

Then came the Masters.

At 12:47 p.m. on that Sunday afternoon last April, Molinari stood on Augusta National’s 12th tee with a two-stroke lead. In a swirling wind, his tee shot drowned in Rae’s Creek, leading to a double bogey. He finished tied for fifth, two shots back of Woods.

Since then the Italian stallion has looked more like a wheezy pack mule: 18 worldwide starts, zero top 10s and five missed cuts, including in three of his four events in 2020. A year ago he was No. 7 in the world. Today he’s ranked 26th.

He has not been the same player since that day in Georgia, raising the question of whether that one swing has lingered. “It hasn’t,” said his coach Denis Pugh. “Because if I sensed it did then I would have chatted about it with him.”

Francesco Molinari plays his third shot on the 12th hole during the final round of the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 14, 2019 in Augusta, Georgia. (Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images)

Pugh suggests it’s a different major last year that holds the key to Molinari’s struggles. In May’s PGA Championship at Bethpage Black, he was paired for two days with Woods and the eventual winner Brooks Koepka, after which he realized that he could not consistently summon power and accuracy in the same swing. After a lengthy break at year’s end, Molinari and his coach set about fixing that. “It’s a slow grind build-up,” Pugh said. “It’s being patient.”

Molinari echoed that sentiment. “I’m a little bit behind where I was planning to be, obviously, at this time. The start of the season has not been as good as I hoped for, but it’s only the start,” he said. “I think I’ve got some good planning for the next few weeks building up to Augusta and some good direction to work towards.”

Even as he works towards Masters ’20, Molinari finds himself still fielding numerous questions about Masters ’19. He spent ample time Tuesday discussing the vagaries of the wind at Augusta National’s perilous little 12th: “Well, if there’s no wind, you know… there’s nothing really that can stop you from hitting that green… You never know how much wind actually it’s going to get… I think it depends on the direction… If it comes from a certain direction it can funnel in the trees and then that’s when it gets really hard… It’s more the wind direction specifically on that hole that makes it tricky… Depends on the exact moment when you’re hitting the shot…”

“It’s just complicated,” he finally offered.

One thing that has helped push thoughts of that Masters mishap to the back of his mind is the coronavirus panic. Last week his older brother Edoardo withdrew from a tournament in Oman amid fears another Italian golfer he was sharing a hotel room with was symptomatic. Both were tested and given an all-clear, and were eventually reinstated in the tournament. The younger Molinari admits to initially seeing humor in the situation.

“I was laughing, actually. If you know my brother, of all people, for it to happen to him,” he said. “Joking aside, obviously being Italian it’s not a great time back home with the health situation.”

Molinari lives in London, but his parents remain at the family home in Turin, a city in northern Italy badly impacted by the virus. Schools have been closed and football games canceled. “They’re not the youngest anymore, so it’s a bit worrying from that point of view,” Molinari admitted. “I speak to them pretty much on a daily basis and they’re fine. There’s nothing too worrying at the moment.”

All of which puts his on-course form into perspective, even as he hopes to find progress at an event where he has finished in the top 10 four times in seven starts. “I try to be honest with myself. In golf it’s never too easy because there’s a part of you that always makes you think you’re close even when you’re not,” he said. “I wouldn’t say I’m particularly close right now. My expectations going into the next few weeks are really to build up some momentum and get better day by day and not really thinking too far ahead of myself.”

And presumably not thinking too far behind himself either.

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2020 Masters field could be the largest in years

The Masters is all about providing the best experience for the players, one reason it has the smallest field of the four majors.

NASSAU, Bahamas – Seven tournaments from the six largest tours over the next three weeks could shape the field for the Masters, and perhaps pave the way for the largest gathering at Augusta National in more than 50 years.

Augusta National invites the top 50 from the final world ranking of the year, and then the top 50 one week before the Masters.

Among those on the bubble are former PGA champion Keegan Bradley, hanging on at No. 48, and Presidents Cup player Cameron Smith at No. 52. The Australian gets two more tries to get into the top 50.

The Masters already has 77 players who have qualified and are expected to play. From this week’s world ranking, 12 players in the top 50 are not yet eligible, meaning the size of the field could swell to 89 players going into the new year. Still to come are 12 events on the PGA Tour that offer Masters invitations to the winner, along with the top 50 from the April 5 world ranking and the Latin American Amateur champion.

Tiger Woods won against a field of 87 players this year for his fifth green jacket.

The Masters is all about providing the best experience for the players, one reason it has the smallest field of the four majors. It has not had more than 100 players since 103 played in 1966.

Why the increase?

Some of it has to do with the increased fall schedule on the PGA Tour.

A year ago, seven tournaments offered full FedEx Cup points, three of them limited fields in Asia. Only two of those seven winners were outside the top 50 in the world – Kevin Tway at the Safeway Open and Charles Howell III at the RSM Classic.

This year, the PGA Tour had 10 tournaments in the fall that offered a Masters invitation. Six of the winners were outside the top 50. Five of them were not among the top 150 in the world.

The tour had two new tournaments in the summer (between the last two majors), won by Nate Lashley in Detroit and Matthew Wolff in Minnesota. With one fewer event in the FedEx Cup postseason, 11 players who reached the Tour Championship – which comes with a Masters invitation – did not win. Five of them would have made the Masters field through other categories.

The Masters had a strong emphasis on amateurs in 1966, awarding invitations to the U.S. Amateur and British Amateur champions from the previous 10 years, the top eight and ties from the last U.S. Amateur and the U.S. Walker Cup team. That meant 26 amateurs were in the field.

Now there are six.

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