Play starts on Thursday in the first tournament since
the Players Championship was halted in mid-March by the pandemic
|
London(Agencies): Tiger Woods and the fans will be missing when golf
returns this week after a three-month hiatus due to the novel coronavirus but
the Charles Schwab Challenge will otherwise get the full major treatment with a
strong field on display. Led by world number one Rory McIlroy, the world’s top
five players and 101 PGA Tour winners will be at the stately Colonial Country
Club outside Forth Worth, Texas.
Play starts on Thursday in the first tournament since the
Players Championship was halted in mid-March by the pandemic. With NASCAR,
IndyCar and the UFC already back in action, the PGA Tour will become the latest
North American sport to emerge from the COVID-19 shutdown.
But like the conditions surrounding those sports, golfers
will be returning to a very different looking arena where social distancing and
the results of nasal swabs and thermal scans will be as important as what they
put on their scorecards.
The most jarring change will be the absence of galleries
that would normally flock to any tournament featuring the world’s best players.
Golf’s biggest name and winner of 15 majors, Woods will
be the only noticeable absentee in the elite field as he continues to get his
game in shape after recovering from back issues.
Television coverage of the Charles Schwab will be
extensive and have all the technological bells and whistles, including a few
new features such as Augmented Reality technology virtual signage.
Some golfers will also wear microphones in an effort to
liven up a subdued soundtrack.
Whatever technology or viewer-friendly gimmicks are
rolled out they will not replace the familiar buzz that resonates across the
course when a player holes out or drains a monster putt.
“The atmosphere
will definitely be different,” world number four Justin Thomas told reporters
after a practice round on Tuesday. “But then again, everything is different
than what we’ve been used to the last three months.”
While the PGA Tour has put together a detailed protocol
outlining in great detail what golfers can expect in the way of testing and
procedure when they arrive at the Colonial, no one knows exactly what they will
see when action gets underway.
Spain’s world number two Jon Rahm, who was self-isolating
in the United States while his family was quarantined in Spain, said he did not
pick up a club for seven weeks.
South Korean Im Sung-jae, leader of the Fedex Cup
standings, flew in his coach to his Florida base to keep him in shape.
“You’re going to
see definitely a wide variety of scores, not just because of the golf course
but just to see who used their time well or not,” said Thomas. “I sometimes
feel rusty after two, three weeks off, let alone four months.
“That’s going to
be weird, but at the same time it’s going to be weird for everybody, so I’m
just going to hopefully try to get back into that as quick as I can.”
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