If there’s a player more affected by the COVID-19 related cancellation of tournaments then it has to be Rory McIlroy.
McIlroy won four times in 2019 – Players Championship, RBC Canadian Open, the Tour Championship and the WGC – HSBC Championship.
Three of those have now been cancelled with the Federation of Golf Tours confirming overnight the cancellation of next month’s WGC – HSBC Championship in Shanghai and as had been reported earlier this week by www.golfbytourmiss.com
On three occasions in his career, McIlroy’s won either four or more times in a single year but then he’s had the option to proudly defend each and every tournament but not in season 2020.
Indeed, McIlroy is yet to win in 2020 and the father-to-be will be desperate in the handful of events remaining, including two Majors, that he can pull off at least one victory in this COVID-19 ravaged year.
There’s been just one year in his 28-tournament winning career, McIlroy not won a single tournament and that being 2017.
However, in looking back on 2019, McIlroy captured a first Players Championship title and the 15th win of his PGA Tour career in defeating Jim Furky by a stroke at Tour HQ but then his defence earlier this year lasted just one round when the Tour announced the event was being cancelled.
A month later and organisers of the RBC Canadian Open, and an event first staged in 1904, was also being cancelled.
McIlroy elected to tee-up in the event for a first time last year and he literally memorised the field, and including playing partner and fellow Irishman Shane Lowry, producing a final round and career low 61 to win the title by seven shots and push Lowry, and a month out from his own triumph at Royal Portrush, into a distant second place.
In August last year, McIlroy captured a second Tour Championship and while the event will go ahead this week it could do without the defending champ.
McIlroy’s listed to attend a virtual media conference on Thursday but there’s a TBC beside his name with the four-time major winner all set to pull the plug on travelling to Atlanta if wife Erica goes into labour.
If so, that would be a third event he won in 2019 that he will not get to defend.
McIlroy’s fourth victory title of last year was in capturing a first WGC – HSBC Champions crown when he defeated American Xander Schauffele in a play-off.
The Chinese government long ago had cancelled all international sports due to the Coronavirus to 2021, so the announcement of the cancelling of ‘Asia’s Major’ comes as no surprise.
PGA Tour executive vice-president Ty Votaw said: “We have worked extensively with all Tours, international officials, the Chine Golf Association and other local parties to find a solution to host the WGC-HSBC Champions.
“In line with Chinese government guidelines and being mindful of the logistical implications, we collectively made the difficult decision to cancel the 2020 event.”
The PGA Tour has recently moved the CJ Cup from South Korea to Las Vegas and the Zozo Championship from Japan to California, but there was no relocation option for the WGC-HSBC Champions.




