A First: A Sporting Event Without Spectators

RememberMurray

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Will other major sports wait and watch, and follow this model?

PGA Tour Announces Mid-June Return in Texas
Golf officials are preparing to restart the season by hosting a tournament in Fort Worth without spectators.

 

Will other major sports wait and watch, and follow this model?

PGA Tour Announces Mid-June Return in Texas
Golf officials are preparing to restart the season by hosting a tournament in Fort Worth without spectators.


Obviously the spacing of golf works to its benefit probably the most of any sport. Baseball wouldn't be too far behind on already in place distancing (obviously at the bases is the main concern). I think we will see more and more dominoes start falling in the next week or two now.
 

Obviously the spacing of golf works to its benefit probably the most of any sport. Baseball wouldn't be too far behind on already in place distancing (obviously at the bases is the main concern). I think we will see more and more dominoes start falling in the next week or two now.
Tennis isn't bad either for the players.
 

Soccer matches in Europe do this all the time, for different reasons, but it certainly happens. Not sure why people think this is new or impossible.
 

Soccer matches in Europe do this all the time, for different reasons, but it certainly happens. Not sure why people think this is new or impossible.

It would be new for major college and pro sports in the U.S. Certainly it would be new to B1G football.

I don't know anyone who said it would be impossible.
 



Horse Racing has continued at a number of tracks without fans.
 

I'm not sure why the PGA Tour ever stopped playing at all. I'm sure the tournament organizers will miss the fan$ but the TV audience mostly won't. The game itself is made for social distancing.
 

My memory is a little iffy — God, 4 weeks past seems like a lifetime ago — but if I recall correctly Rory McElroy was pretty vocal about being sure everyone was safe... maybe some other players spoke out as well?

You can hold an event without spectators, but if the players don't show...
 




Remember, the PGA continued play at Congressional in 2012 without fans after a storm damaged the course.


-- Tiger Woods stepped out of the clubhouse at Congressional and into a strange new world of quiet Saturday. No one called out his name. No one pushed against the ropes and held out a cap for him to sign. No one was there.

The third round of the AT&T National was closed to spectators and volunteers for safety reasons after a powerful wind storm left large trees upended across the golf course. Mark Russell, the PGA Tour's vice president of rules and competition, could not remember another time when a tour event did not allow fans.

"It's too dangerous out here," Russell said. "There's a lot of hanging limbs. There's a lot of debris. It's like a tornado came through here. It's just not safe."

But when the third round got under way after a six-hour delay, only 16 people were in the bleachers behind the tee. Six of them were essential volunteers. The other 10 worked in a support capacity for the tournaments, such as supplying telecommunications.

The early morning was filled with the sound of chain saws as crews set out to remove more than 40 trees that had been uprooted, including a 75-foot tree that crashed across the 14th fairway. By afternoon, when the temperature began another climb toward 100, it sounded like a quiet afternoon in the park.

Much of the damage was caused by a weather phenomenon called a derecho (duh-RAY'-choh), a long-lived straight line wind storm that sweeps over a large area at high speed. Stewart Williams, the PGA Tour's meteorologist, said the wind reached 80 mph Friday night, and the derecho was capable of doing the same amount of damage as an F-1 tornado.
 



It would be new for major college and pro sports in the U.S. Certainly it would be new to B1G football.

I don't know anyone who said it would be impossible.
Orioles and White Sox played without fans due to civil unrest in Baltimore a few years ago.
 



Still running at Gulfstream in Miami last time I checked a nd a few others. Done closed as the backstretch workers started to get it.
Yeah - I dropped a good chunk on the $8M Rainbow 6 today at Gulfstream. Only 3 races in, but my interest is already done. Maybe it would be better if they weren’t still open?
 

Yeah - I dropped a good chunk on the $8M Rainbow 6 today at Gulfstream. Only 3 races in, but my interest is already done. Maybe it would be better if they weren’t still open?

I didn't know you were interested in horse racing.

I am not an aficionado. But I used to enjoy the mystery novels of Dick Francis. He was a British writer who was formerly a top jockey in England, until he suffered a racing injury that made it impossible to ride competitively, and he decided to write. His novels all had some connection to racing, which he loved. Some were very directly about horse racing, some were only connected to it tangentially.

The books are light reading, but enjoyable. Have you heard of Francis?
 

I didn't know you were interested in horse racing.

I am not an aficionado. But I used to enjoy the mystery novels of Dick Francis. He was a British writer who was formerly a top jockey in England, until he suffered a racing injury that made it impossible to ride competitively, and he decided to write. His novels all had some connection to racing, which he loved. Some were very directly about horse racing, some were only connected to it tangentially.

The books are light reading, but enjoyable. Have you heard of Francis?
I have not. I’ll check it out, but the only books I have read on the subject are in regards to betting strategies, statistics, and calculations. Even those were years ago.
 

grand sumo last month. it was called the ghost basho

 




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