The changes last week were driven by two regions. The Mid-Atlantic U.S census region, which includes New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania and their combined 1,900 golf courses, went from having less than 1-in-20 courses open for play to almost 1-in-4 as more of New York’s 850+ courses continue to reopen. And the Great Lakes states of Wisconsin, Michigan and Illinois also approved golf courses to reopen with enhanced safety practices in place, including walking-only play.
“While course openings are increasing, restrictions on pro shops, cart usage and F&B operations will result in lower overall revenue per round for operators. For some, this reduction in revenue could be very challenging,” said NGF President and CEO Joe Beditz. “This is a reminder that while news of golf continuing to gain traction as a safe and healthy activity is encouraging, the industry is not out of the woods yet – by any means.”
On the consumer side, research shows that golfers’ overall anxiety about COVID-19 is slowly but steadily decreasing as infection and mortality numbers improve. Among the new core golfer findings this week: the “itch” to watch live golf is almost as significant as the itch to play golf itself.
The NGF’s special webpage, www.thengfq.com/covid-19, is dedicated to continuing research on the effects of the coronavirus on golf and features the latest data and information on course operational status, government orders, consumer sentiment, and much more. NGF’s ongoing national tracking of golf facilities provides an in-depth overview of course openings and temporary closures through the most nationally-representative sample in the industry.
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