Uncertainty with majors as much about who plays as when

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The new slogan the U.S. Open introduced just 17 days ago is an indication of how complicated it will be for golf to resume, assuming it ever does this year.

It’s not a matter of when the majors are played. It becomes a question of who plays.

The branding campaign called “From Many, One,” touches on the identity that sets the U.S. Open — men’s and women’s — apart from the other majors.

The U.S. Open usually gets about 9,000 entries who go through 18 holes of local qualifying or 36 holes of sectional qualifying, sometimes both. From that comes the 156-man field, half of whom have to qualify.

The USGA is sticking to its principles, at least for now, by scrapping qualifiers for men and women in May.

The U.S. Women’s Open is to be played June 4-7 in Houston. The U.S. Open is set for June 18-21 at Winged Foot, located about five miles away from the new coronavirus containment zone set up in New Rochelle, New York.

Both remain on the schedule.

Before contemplating location, consider the calendar.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention got everyone’s attention Sunday when it recommended that events of 50 people or more not be held for the next eight weeks, which goes until May 10, at the minimum.

The first of 109 local qualifiers for the U.S. Open was to start on April 27 and go through May 12. The U.S Women’s Open had 25 sectional qualifiers that were to start on April 22. The first one had been schedule for Kent, Washington, one of the hardest-hit areas for the coronavirus.

Those have been canceled.

The USGA said it would work with its partners to “redesign qualifying going forward as events unfold.” Exactly how that unfolds might be the toughest test in golf.

To attempt a solution is the right course.

It’s not really a U.S. Open without qualifying at all levels. The 18-hole local qualifiers, while not as memorable as who ends up winning, are still important. That’s what the brand campaign suggests, anyway.

But it goes beyond qualifiers.

Exempt players include the top 10 on the LPGA Tour money list through April 15, and the top 75 in the world ranking. Keep in mind the LPGA has played only four times this year — twice in Florida, twice in Australia — before canceling or postponing six straight events, with perhaps more to follow.

The British Open, scheduled for July 16-19, already has held four of its international final qualifiers, most recently at Bay Hill two weeks ago, with the next one scheduled in Japan at the end of May. It also takes the top 50 in the world, typically in late May, at which point a golf tournament might not have been played. The next event on the European Tour schedule, for example, is Denmark on May 21-24.

The Masters was the first men’s major to be postponed, scheduled for April 9-12. Moving to May, right about the time the club closes for the summer, would seem to be a long shot. If that’s the case, it would be simple enough to add the top 50 from the world ranking not already in — four players based on this week’s ranking.

If it moves to the fall, Augusta National could save the PGA Tour winners after April 12 and any late entries to the top 50 until the 2021 Masters.

As for scheduling? That will require a new level of cooperation among the four organizations than run the majors and the PGA Tour and European Tour, which supply the majority of the players.

It will be a shorter season, if there is a season.

Still to be determined is the fate of the Olympics in Tokyo this summer, though the IOC is probably two months away from deciding. That involves qualifying in other sports that make golf look easy by comparison.

If no golf is played before the golf qualifying ends on June 22, the top four Americans would be Justin Thomas, Brooks Koepka, Webb Simpson and Xander Schauffele — followed by Patrick Reed and Patrick Cantlay if any of the four choose not to play. That’s according to a world ranking expert known only as “Nosferatu” on Twitter.

So it would look bleak for Tiger Woods chasing a gold medal.

Then again, if the Olympics are not held, that would be the least of anyone’s concerns.

Jeff Conrad, 56, hits his ball as his wife Karen, 54, looks on while they play the 18th hole of the Copperhead course at Innisbrook Golf Resort, Monday, March 16, 2020 in Palm Harbor, Fla. With the Valspar Tournament shut down due to the coronavirus outbreak, golfers had the unique opportunity to play on a tour-ready golf course. (Chris Urso/Tampa Bay Times via AP)
https://www.wnewsj.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/22/2020/03/web1_124608777-2d489987b2ae48c89795e7b0175f7e16.jpgJeff Conrad, 56, hits his ball as his wife Karen, 54, looks on while they play the 18th hole of the Copperhead course at Innisbrook Golf Resort, Monday, March 16, 2020 in Palm Harbor, Fla. With the Valspar Tournament shut down due to the coronavirus outbreak, golfers had the unique opportunity to play on a tour-ready golf course. (Chris Urso/Tampa Bay Times via AP)

FILE – In this April 4, 2011, file photo, golf fans watch practice on the par three 16th hole during a practice round for the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Ga. Augusta National decided Friday, March 13, 2020, to postpone the Masters because of the spread of the coronavirus. Club chairman Fred Ridley says he hopes postponing the event puts Augusta National in the best position to host the Masters and its other two events at some later date. Ridley did not say when it would be held. (Tim Dominick/The State via AP, File)
https://www.wnewsj.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/22/2020/03/web1_124608777-a892bc5bab1048d3918374fe23614441.jpgFILE – In this April 4, 2011, file photo, golf fans watch practice on the par three 16th hole during a practice round for the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Ga. Augusta National decided Friday, March 13, 2020, to postpone the Masters because of the spread of the coronavirus. Club chairman Fred Ridley says he hopes postponing the event puts Augusta National in the best position to host the Masters and its other two events at some later date. Ridley did not say when it would be held. (Tim Dominick/The State via AP, File)

FILE – In this April 14, 2019, file photo, Patrick Reed, left, helps Tiger Woods with his green jacket after Woods won the Masters golf tournament, in Augusta, Ga. The annual rite of spring for golf won’t happen this year. The Masters has been postponed until a later date. Augusta National did not indicate when the Masters would be played. That means there will be no golf at least for the next month. The Masters began in 1934 and only World War II has kept it from being played. This was the biggest shoe to drop for golf. The PGA Tour already canceled the next three events leading up to the Masters. Tiger Woods was to be going after his sixth green jacket. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum, File)
https://www.wnewsj.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/22/2020/03/web1_124608777-6ba1d41cc4b646d59bbc541daf6b35d9.jpgFILE – In this April 14, 2019, file photo, Patrick Reed, left, helps Tiger Woods with his green jacket after Woods won the Masters golf tournament, in Augusta, Ga. The annual rite of spring for golf won’t happen this year. The Masters has been postponed until a later date. Augusta National did not indicate when the Masters would be played. That means there will be no golf at least for the next month. The Masters began in 1934 and only World War II has kept it from being played. This was the biggest shoe to drop for golf. The PGA Tour already canceled the next three events leading up to the Masters. Tiger Woods was to be going after his sixth green jacket. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum, File)

By DOUG FERGUSON

AP Golf Writer

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