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PGA TOUR's Monahan excited about return of golf

Sanford Health lab technicians have set up traveling mobile testing units that deliver results in a matter of hours.

News desk (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Thu, June 11, 2020

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PGA TOUR's Monahan excited about return of golf PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan (The Jakarta Post/PGA Tour/Getty Images)

T

he PGA TOUR’s 91-day hiatus since The Players Championship was cancelled - the longest unscheduled break from competition since World War II - will finally end Thursday when play resumes at the Charles Schwab Challenge.  

As one of the first sports to get underway since the COVID-19 pandemic, golf is prepared to take center stage in Fort Worth, Texas, where current FedExCup No. 1 Sungjae Im will lead a stellar field that includes the top-five players in the world and 16 of the top 20.  

PGA TOUR commissioner Jay Monahan is well aware of what’s at stake. “I think at this point you have a wide range of emotions. But the most important one, or the most prevalent one for me, is that I’m excited,” he said.  

“I know our players are excited. I know everybody that’s been a part of this process is excited to stand our game back up in such a strong way this week at the Charles Schwab Challenge, with a field that features the top five players in the world and more than 100 PGA TOUR winners coming back to a place that we’ve played consecutively annually since 1946 at Colonial Country Club. I’m excited. To that point, it’s hard to believe it will have been 91 days since we last played, but I’m really proud of the effort that everybody has undertaken to get us back there” 

Preparation is already well under way at Colonial Country Club, where Sanford Health lab technicians have set up traveling mobile testing units that deliver results in a matter of hours. This partnership, Monahan said, should greatly assist the PGA TOUR in its safe and responsible return to play. 

“We were really looking at this from two standpoints,” Monahan said. “How do we apply our testing program that allows our players to prepare to compete and not have to wait for an extended period of time? And at the same time, how do we do so in a way that does not take away from the resources that are needed for the communities where we play?  

“To be able to have these mobile testing facilities and vans at our tournament this week at Colonial and every week going forward, to arrive and have that test turned around in two to four hours, and for us to be able to purchase all those supplies and provide all those resources, accomplishes both of those goals.” 

Even if a player tests positive, the TOUR is confident that proper measures are in place to maintain a safe atmosphere for players and caddies. Players are tested prior to and immediately after their arrival in a tournament city, and once again to use certain areas of the golf course facility.

 

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