Organisers had planned a late-January, early-February window for
the men's Australian Open in Sydney after its original November
schedule proved untenable.
But Golf Australia boss James Sutherland said enduring travel
curbs and the country's mandatory 14-day quarantine had left
organisers with no choice but to cancel the flagship event for a
second year in a row.
"The international element means shifting quarantine and travel
restrictions wreak havoc on planning and, with our marquee
players living abroad, the challenge is even greater,"
Sutherland said in a statement on Thursday.
"The pressure and risk on host venues and organisers is also
high - these are small businesses who have already faced huge
disruption due to the pandemic."
The women's Australian Open, a stop on the elite LPGA Tour, had
been scheduled for February in Adelaide.
Australia's borders are effectively shut and unlikely to open to
non-residents until 2022, while the two-week isolation is
putting off the nation's top players from coming home from the
U.S. and European tours to support the domestic game.
The country's other marquee golf event, the Australian PGA
Championship, will plough ahead in Brisbane from Jan. 13, though
many home-based professionals will be unable to attend.
Queensland state, of which Brisbane is the capital, has shut its
borders to southeastern states that are battling COVID-19
outbreaks.
(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Stephen
Coates)
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