The return of the Open Championship after a two-year hiatus will be cause for celebration this week. But reminders of why it was canceled last year still linger.
Bubba Watson is the latest star to announce his withdrawal from the field at Royal St. George’s, announcing on Twitter he had close contact with someone who had tested positive for COVID-19. Watson said he’s been vaccinated and tested negative in his pre-travel COVID-19 test, but U.K. protocols prevent him from boarding the charter flight to England. “Getting on the charter or a commercial flight was not an option available to me after my recent exposure. I don’t make the rules but do have to follow them,” Watson wrote.
Watson is the fifth player to announce his withdrawal in recent days. After withdrawing from last week’s Rocket Mortgage Classic because of a positive COVID-19 test, Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama has continued to test positive in subsequent PCR tests despite saying he’s symptom free; and Matthew Wolff, K.H. Lee, and Danny Lee have all withdrawn as well.
Watson, a two-time Masters champion who finished sixth in last week’s Rocket Mortgage Classic, has never placed in the top 10 in 11 appearances in the Open, but in the eyes of fellow lefthander Phil Mickelson at least, is believed to possess the shotmaking ability and creativity to fare well on links courses.
“I’m so sorry. You’ve been playing some great golf and the course is such a great one for you,” Mickelson wrote.