A PGA Tour First In 238-Days With Spectators Allowed Into Houston Open

In what will be a PGA Tour first in 238 days organisers of next month’s The PGA Tour have announced 2,000 spectators a day will be allowed to attend next month’s 73rd edition of the Houston Open in Texas.

It will be the first golf tournament on either the European Tour or PGA Tour to allow spectators, and this after organisers of the recent ASI Scottish Open had to abandon plans to allow 650 spectators per day due to an increase in coronavirus cases.

However, those lucky enough to get a ticket into the Houston Open, and being held the week prior to the Masters, will pay for the privilege.

Instead of the normal $30 to $60 price range, tickets will be $109 for the event being played from November 5 -8 on the Memorial Park course.

We are very happy that we will have fans at Memorial Park for this year’s Houston Open,” said tournament spokesman Giles Kibbe.

Kibbe said everyone attending the event will have to wear a face mask and practise social distancing.

Aussie Adam Scott all set to tee-up in the 73rd Houston Open

The tournament was originally scheduled to take place November 12-15 but was moved to the first week of November due to the Tour restructuring its program because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The last PGA Tour event to allow spectators was on March 12th and the opening day of the Players Championship that was later that night cancelled.

Teeing-up in the Houston Open will be World No. 1 Dustin Johnson along with fellow Major winners Brooks Koepka, Jason Day, Louis Oosthuizen, Adam Scott, Danny Willett and Northern Ireland’s Graeme McDowell

 

 



Comments are closed.