Australia Open cancelled for first time since WW2
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[October 16, 2020]
SYDNEY (Reuters) - The Australia
Open will be absent from the sporting calendar for the first time
since World War Two this season after Golf Australia and the PGA of
Australia cancelled all of their top events on Friday because of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
The 105th edition of the country's oldest and most prestigious
tournament, scheduled to take place at Melbourne's Kingston Heath
Golf Club, had already been postponed from its usual slot in
November.
With Melbourne still in lockdown and access to Australia still
extremely difficult for foreigners, however, the governing bodies
decided to cancel both men and women's Opens as well as the
Australian PGA Championship.
"It's unprecedented and a real blow for Australian golf and its
fans," PGA of Australia chief executive Gavin Kirkman said in a news
release.
"We have collectively spent months in exhaustive consultation with
all relevant authorities and our sanctioning partners to try to find
a way to stage all three events safely.
"But even with multiple contingency plans, it has reached a point
where decisions have to be made and this, regrettably, is the one
we've had to take."
The Australian PGA Championship, which was first played in 1905 and
is co-sanctioned by the European Tour, had already been moved from
December to February at Brisbane's Royal Queensland.
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Marc Leishman of Australia hits from a sand trap on the seventh hole
during third round play of the 2018 Masters golf tournament at the
Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia, U.S. April 7, 2018.
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
The governing bodies said they considered a raft of measures to get
the tournaments up and running, including bringing players into a
biosecure bubble and restricting crowds, but the options proved
"unviable".
"The events rely on significant support from players and tours
around the world, so given current quarantine restrictions, we
believe the field strength of all three events would be severely
compromised," said Golf Australia's new chief executive James
Sutherland.
(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney, editing by Michael Perry)
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