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Confession cam, mic’d up players and health fears – why PGA Tour’s TV return is even more complicated than Super Bowl

WORLD No 1 Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson took to the course ahead of the PGA Tour’s big return on Thursday.

The duo will headline a star-studded field at the Charles Schwab Challenge, which includes nine of the top 10 players as golf returns after coronavirus.

McIlroy and Johnson took to the Colonial course ahead of the PGA Tour’s big return on Thursday
Fans will not be allowed on the course amid continued fears over coronavirus

But with no fans allowed on the ground, TV broadcasters have brought in radical new measures to entertain viewers.

And the logistics that have gone into making sure it all works are even “more complicated” than the Super Bowl, according to one telly boss.

The biggest innovation will be the “confession cam”.

Pros will be able to step into a tent somewhere on the course and provide a 20-second soundbite or answer a question during their round.

It is not yet clear whether some pros will be told they have to do it, or if it will be up to them.

CBS network in America, who will broadcast the tournament, have also been aggressively persuading players to wear microphones during rounds.

They were used to great success in Tiger Woods’ charity match against Phil Mickelson last month.

Banter was flying back and forth between the golfing legends as NFL icons Peyton Manning and Tom Brady joined in too.

Caddies are taking no chances as the PGA Tour returns after a 90-day break
Woods was micd up for his charity match but some players are against it

But the chat was not quite so good when McIlroy and Johnson teamed up to beat Rickie Fowler and Matthew Wolff the weekend before.

Broadcasters want as many pros as possible to be mic’d up.

But former world No 1 Justin Thomas has already said he won’t.

He said: “What I talk about with Jimmy [Johnson, caddy] and what I talk about with the guys in my group is none of anybody else’s business, no offence.

“As close as those mics are on the tees and the greens, and as close as they get the boom mics during competition, I feel like I basically am mic’d up.

“I can’t say some of the stuff I’d usually say. It’s not that it’s bad [but] if I want somebody to know what I’ve said, I’ll say it in a press conference, I’ll say it in an interview or put it out on social media.”

There are no plans to pump fake crowd noise in – as Sky have offered in the Bundesliga.

Players and staff are being urged to keep following social distance guidelines

But instead efforts will be made to keep the course as safe as possible amid the lingering threat of coronavirus, with signs urging people to respect social distance guidelines placed all over the club and course.

CBS Sports chairman Sean McManus said: “This is the most complicated production plan I’ve ever been involved in and that includes Super Bowls.

“It’s different than anything we’ve ever done.”