LPGA braced for positive tests,
tournament cancellations
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[July 16, 2020]
By Steve Keating
(Reuters) - The LPGA Tour, the elite
women’s professional golf circuit, will restart its
COVID-19-interrupted season this month expecting positive tests and
as many as three events to be cancelled, commissioner Mike Whan said
on Wednesday.
Whan was positive but realistic discussing the LPGA's plans for a
relaunch with two events in Ohio starting with the Drive On
Championship three-day event from July 31 to Aug. 2 in Toledo
followed the next week by the Marathon LPGA Classic in Sylvania.
The LPGA will benefit from using many of the same health and safety
protocols employed by the PGA Tour which has staged five tournaments
since it returned to action.
But even with rigid testing and comprehensive safety measures Whan
is braced for positive tests just as the PGA has had to deal with.
"It is strange to get started in a time in which we know we're going
to have positive results no matter what we build," said Whan during
a conference call. "It won't be anybody's fault per se but positive
results happen.
"I'm excited about the schedule we have remaining for 2020; and at
the same time, 120 days into coronavirus, I realize we are really
not in charge of that schedule.
"I fully believe we'll lose another event or two or three along the
way."
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While the Drive On Championship will be held without spectators,
Whan confirmed that the Tour is still considering allowing fans into
the Marathon LPGA Classic even as the number of positive COVID-19
tests surges across parts of the United States.
New cases are averaging around 60,000 a day and more than 136,000
Americans have died from the highly contagious respiratory illness.
The PGA had hoped to have fans this week at the Memorial Tournament
at Muirfield Village in Columbus, Ohio but a spike in cases prompted
Tour officials to announce there will be no spectators at any events
the rest of the season.
"We'll make a decision on fans at the end of the week," said Whan.
"They are waiting for some local health input.
"If we have fans, it will be 2,000 or less a day and we have a
roping factor for that.
"If the final decision is to go without fans, we have said from the
beginning we are totally fine with that."
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto, Editing by Ed Osmond)
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