Golf: Players Championship and next three PGA Tour events cancelled

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Hideki Matsuyama plays a shot on the 14th hole during the first round of the Players Championship in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, on March 12, 2020.

PHOTO: AFP

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PONTE VEDRA BEACH, FLORIDA (REUTERS) - The Players championship golf tournament in Florida has been cancelled after the first round due to coronavirus concerns, the PGA Tour said late on Thursday (March 12).
The next three events have also been scrapped.
"It is with regret that we are announcing the cancellation of THE PLAYERS Championship and all events through the Valero Texas Open," the PGA Tour said on Twitter.
The Tour sent players a text saying that the cancellation was due to a "rapidly changing situation" and that more information would follow.
Earlier on Thursday, commissioner Jay Monahan announced that the final three rounds of The tour's flagship event would be played without any spectators.
The first round was played in front of spectators at TPC Sawgrass. Japan's Hideki Matsuyama led at nine-under-par 63.
The cancellations ends just ahead of the April 9-12 Masters at Augusta National where the year's first Major is due to be contested.
Taking advantage of ideal morning conditions, Matsuyama had got his round off to a flying start with four consecutive birdies.
But the highlight and biggest cheer came on his final hole where he rolled in a 25-foot eagle putt at the par-five ninth to become the ninth player to shoot 63 on the course.
"You hit a good shot or make a good putt, the crowd reaction kind of gets you going," said Matsuyama, the only blemish on his card a bogey at the par-five 16th.
"It's probably going to be strange for all of us (playing without spectators), but it's still golf, we'll just go out and play our best.
"I think all of us will have to go back to our college days to play without a gallery." Matsuyama's performance earned him a two-stroke cushion over South African Christiaan Bezuidenhout, American Harris English and South Korea's Kim Si-woo all on seven-under 65.
Australian Marc Leishman and American Patrick Cantlay were two further adrift.
World No. 1 Rory McIlroy, who has had six consecutive top-five finishes, opened with a level-par 72 and said the round felt flat to start with the PGA announcement coming just as he was preparing to tee off.
"Maybe a little flat at the beginning," said McIlroy, who is bidding to become the first player to successfully defend the Players Championship.
"If it had have been earlier I think they probably wouldn't have let them (spectators) in.
"So they at least they got to enjoy themselves for one day and yeah, now it's going to look a little different."
The day began with happy fans filing into TPC Sawgrass and the PGA Tour under fire for pushing ahead with play while most of North America's other major sports leagues and events were cancelling or postponing competitions.
Overnight the NBA had announced it was suspending its season indefinitely and pressure continued to mount in the morning as the Miami Open, one of tennis's biggest tournaments, was cancelled and Major League Soccer was suspended for 30 days.
The mood turned sour as word filtered through the galleries and the field that the PGA Tour had decided to take drastic steps in an attempt to curb the spread of the outbreak.
As golfers walked off the course they looked around at the fans milling about and pondered what is was going to look and feel like playing the next three rounds without spectators.
"It's going to be surreal. It's going to be bizarre feeling, especially this event where crowd interaction is such a big key to this golf tournament," said Graeme McDowell, after the Northern Irishman had turned in an opening round four-under 68.
"But what we're doing here is insignificant in comparison to what's happening in the world."
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