Golf

LPGA Tour's Canadian stop cancelled for 2nd straight year due to pandemic

The LPGA Tour's lone Canadian stop will not take place for the second year in a row because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

CP Women's Open was scheduled to be played in Vancouver Aug. 23-29

Brooke Henderson of Smith's Falls, Ont., is seen above at the 2019 CP Women's Open. The event was cancelled for a second straight year on Wednesday due to the COVID-19 pandemic. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

The LPGA Tour's lone Canadian stop will not take place for the second year in a row because of border restrictions and logistical challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Golf Canada announced Wednesday the CP Women's Open, scheduled for Vancouver's Shaughnessy Golf and Country Club Aug. 23-29, has been cancelled.

The organization also cancelled the PGA Tour's RBC Canadian Open, scheduled for June in Toronto, for the second year in a row earlier this year.

Golf Canada says Shaughnessy has been awarded the event for 2023.

CP also announced Wednesday it has extended its title sponsorship of the event for another year, taking it through 2024.

"Together with CP, the LPGA Tour, and our friends at Shaughnessy, we share in the deep disappointment of the players, volunteers, partners, and golf fans with the cancellation of the 2021 CP Women's Open," Golf Canada CEO Laurence Applebaum said in a statement.

"Even with our extensive health and safety plan, we continued to face a number of significant logistical challenges that led to this unfortunate decision for a second year."

The CP Women's Open joins Formula One's Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal and the Honda Indy Toronto as major annual Canadian summer sports events to be cancelled two years in a row.

The National Bank Open tennis tournaments in Toronto and Montreal in August have not been cancelled, but organizers say they are looking at American venues to host the events if they can't be held in Canada.

The CP Women's Open has been held annually in Canada under different names since 1973.

Canadian Jocelyne Bourassa won the inaugural event and Brooke Henderson became the second player from Canada to win the tournament in 2018.

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