Varner has no fears about getting
back on the PGA Tour bus
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[May 04, 2020]
By Andrew Both
(Reuters) - Harold Varner III is
getting impatient to play professional golf again, and has no qualms
about jumping straight back into the water when the PGA Tour resumes
next month amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
While some players have expressed reticence to commit to competing
again until they know details of the tour's plan to test for the
novel coronavirus, Varner is not among them.
The PGA Tour is scheduled to restart without spectators with the
Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas from June 11-14.
It will be among the first professional sporting bodies in the
United States to resume after shutting down on March 12.
"Someone's got to start somewhere or we're going to put ourselves in
a hole we can't get out of," Varner said in a telephone interview
with Reuters, referring to the general economy rather than golf
specifically.
"The economy and everything, if we stop for six months it's going to
be hard to get going.
"Pros will be fine but there's going to be a trickle-down effect.
You're seeing businesses that aren't making it for two months that
we've been gone. If we did this for six months it's going to get
everybody."
The tour has said it wants to test all players for coronavirus when
it resumes, but has not been specific about its exact plans.
In a recent Golf Digest survey of 35 players, slightly more than
half said they would be prepared to compete only if a comprehensive
testing plan is in place at every tournament.
HOME DRIVING RANGE
Varner has been keeping busy since the tour suspended its season.
The North Carolina native moved into a new house in Charlotte late
last year and he has also bought a 16-acre (six-hectare) property
nearby for his parents, with a driving range to boot.
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"I've been hanging out there a lot over this break," he said. "Have
got a bundle of toys like tractors, plenty of things to do, an
indoor place to hit, everything you can think of.
"I've been practicing a decent amount."
He's also found time for turkey hunting and exchanging the
occasional text with North Carolina's most famous son, basketball
great Michael Jordan.
Varner is contracted to wear Jordan Brand shoes and apparel.
Now he is ready to get back onto the road, even if has to pull his
own clubs if the tour bans caddies from handing them to players,
which it has been speculated it will do to reduce the chances of
anyone contracting coronavirus.
"I don't really care. It wouldn't be the first time," said the
29-year-old, who won the 2016 Australian PGA Championship.
Still seeking his first PGA Tour victory, he has knocked on the door
a few times, most recently at the Genesis Open in Los Angeles, where
he was one stroke from the lead starting the final round before
finishing 13th.
"I'll do whatever it takes to get back to playing," Varner said.
"I'll play everything until the new year. That's what I do. What am
I going to do, sit at home? I've been sitting home the last six
weeks."
(Reporting by Andrew Both in Cary, North Carolina; Editing by
Christian Radnedge)
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