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PGA Championship latest Major hit by coronavirus pandemic

Golf's PGA Championship, scheduled for 14-17 May at Harding Park in San Francisco, has been postponed, the second 2020 major championship to be derailed by the coronavirus pandemic.

The PGA of America said on Tuesday they hoped to reschedule the event at Harding Park later in the year.

The news came after Augusta National Golf Club announced that the Masters would not be held 9-12 April.

The decision by the PGA of America to postpone the PGA Championship comes as millions of San Francisco residents have been ordered to stay home in a bid to slow the spread of the deadly coronavirus.

Six counties in the San Francisco Bay Area and the city of Berkeley were part of a lockdown effort after data showed 258 confirmed cases of Covid-19 with four deaths as of Monday.

"Throughout our evaluation process, we have been committed to following the guidance of public health authorities and given the coronavirus shelter-in-place order in effect in San Francisco, postponement is the best decision for all involved," said PGA of America chief executive Seth Waugh.

"This is a reflection of a thoughtful process," Waugh added. "We are and have been working in concert with Commissioner Jay Monahan and our partners and friends at the PGA Tour to find an alternative date that works for all. We are all very hopeful for a great outcome.

"We are also in dialogue with Mayor (London) Breed and her team at the City of San Francisco and look forward to hopefully bringing the 2020 PGA Championship to TPC Harding Park at a date this summer when it is once again safe and responsible to do so."

The postponement means a delay for Brooks Koepka's bid for a title three-peat. The American lifted the Wanamaker Trophy in 2018 and again last year.

Only one man has won three consecutive PGAs, when Walter Hagen captured four straight in a match-play format from 1924-27.

Shortly after the PGA Championship was postponed, the US PGA Tour announced it was extending its own tournament moratorium.

The US tour had announced on 12 March it was cancelling or postponing four weeks' worth of events on all six of its tours through 5 April - the last Sunday before the Masters.

Now it will be on hiatus at least up to 10 May.

"With the most recent recommendations from the Centres for Disease Control, the World Health Organisation and the Office of the President of the United States, the PGA Tour will now cancel four additional events: RBC Heritage (13-19 April); Zurich Classic of New Orleans (20-26 April); Wells Fargo Championship (27 April - 3 May); and AT&T Byron Nelson (4-10 May)," the tour said.

The US Golf Association on Tuesday announced cancellation of its first two amateur championships of 2020, the US Women's Amateur Four-Ball and the US Amateur Four-Ball.

In addition, the USGA has cancelled the first stage of qualifying for the US Open and qualifying for the US Women's Open.

Both of those major championships remain scheduled for June. The US Women's Open is set to be held at Champions Golf Club in Houston 4-7 June and the US Open, the third men's major on the calendar, is set for 18-21 June at Winged Foot.

The PGA Tour said it would work with its own tournament organisers as well as other governing bodies to sort out a schedule for 2020 once play resumes.

"As we receive more clarity in the coming weeks, the tour will be working with our tournament organizations and title sponsors, in collaboration with golf's governing bodies, to build a PGA tour schedule for 2020 that ensures the health and safety for all associated with our sport and a meaningful conclusion to the season," the PGA Tour said.

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