Golf

Sport24.co.za | SA's Frittelli won't defend John Deere PGA title as event is cancelled



  • The PGA Tour’s John Deere Classic, scheduled for 9-12 July and set to be the first event staged with fans since the coronavirus pandemic, has been cancelled.
  • South Africa’s Dylan Frittelli was the defending champion.
  • Ongoing Covid-19 restrictions in the state of Illinois ban gatherings
    of more than 50 people and those were expected to still be in place
    during the week of the event.

The John Deere Classic, in position to be the first PGA Tour event to be played with spectators since the coronavirus pandemic, has been cancelled, the tour confirmed on Thursday.

Multiple media outlets had reported the event, scheduled for 9-12 July in Silvis, Illinois, would not be staged this year.

“As a result of this decision, the PGA Tour announced that it will fill the week vacated by the John Deere Classic with a new tournament,” the tour said in a statement, adding that details on the venue would be forthcoming in the near future.

“Because of the ongoing health and safety concerns related to the coronavirus pandemic, the difficult decision was made to cancel the 2020 John Deere Classic,” said tournament director Clair Peterson. “While we considered several alternatives for the Classic, this was the choice that made the most sense for our guests, the players and the Quad City community at large.”

The Classic, won last year by South Africa’s Dylan Frittelli, is a staple at TPC Deere Run and was scheduled to be the fifth tournament in the tour’s return since it shut down in March.

Ongoing coronavirus restrictions in the state of Illinois ban gatherings of more than 50 people and those were expected to still be in place during the week of the John Deere event.

World No 1 Rory McIlroy plans to be among the golfers in the first return event, the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial on 11-14 June without spectators at Fort Worth, Texas.

Three other events are set to be played without fans – the Heritage in South Carolina, the Travelers Championship in Connecticut and the Rocket Mortgage Classic in Detroit – through 5 July.

With the John Deere Classic gone, the first possible event on the PGA schedule to allow spectators would be the Jack Nicklaus-hosted Memorial Tournament 16-19 July at Dublin, Ohio.





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