From Scott's perspective, the new rules
established by the PGA to keep players safe and healthy amid the
coronavirus pandemic aren't enough.
"They are being fairly thorough, but my initial reaction was I
was surprised it wasn't tighter than it is," Scott told the
Australian Associated Press. "What concerns me is dialogue that
[the Tour] is hopeful of returning one- or two-hour test. You'd
want that in place before competing."
He said he will not play the first six events back, the first of
which is scheduled to start June 11 at the Charles Schwab
Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas. Scott said he is likely to
resume his season in late July at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude
Invitational before playing the PGA Championship.
Scott was critical of the protocol established by the PGA Tour
to use nasal swab/saliva tests for players and their caddies,
plus PGA Tour and tournament officials, while screening others
on site at tournaments only with thermal readings and questions
about medical history.
"An asymptomatic person could operate within a tournament," he
said. "If they're not showing symptoms, and I somehow picked it
up inside the course, and I'm disqualified, I'm now
self-isolating [in that city] for two weeks. I'd be annoyed if
that happened."
Scott, 39, has 14 PGA Tour victories, including The Genesis
Invitational this year before play was suspended.
--Field Level Media
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