I'd be surprised if the NFL doesn't play, unless the government mandates it or the players refuse. Teams/owners make the vast majority of their money from the TV contracts, so they likely wouldn't care if they had to play in empty stadiums with no fans.
The same can be said for just about all of the major U.S. sports and leagues. The majority of revenue comes from television contracts and what they get from parking, ticket, concession and merchandise sales is gravy. It's bonus money to the owners. The NFL, NBA and MLB owners will make money regardless if fans are in the seats. The NHL not so much, as they have the lowest paying TV contracts. NHL franchise owners are more dependent on having butts in the seats than the other major North American sports.
The PGA Tour is a mystery to me because of the different factions involved in putting on an event. For starters, you have the host golf club that needs to get something monetarily speaking for putting on the event. Are they completely reliant on ticket, parking and concession sales to cover their costs or do they receive a portion of the TV, sponsorship and merchandise money? Speaking of sponsors, what cut or percentage of revenue does a title sponsor receive for putting up the prize money for a PGA Tour event, if any? With the PGA Tour being a non-profit organization, what percentage of the revenue from the TV contracts they negotiate go to them and does any of that money go to the host club or title sponsor to cover their costs? Also, who gets what on merchandise sales and how is that revenue split between the various parties and charities?
I'm purely speculating, but unless the various network TV contracts in place are rich, I can't see how the PGA Tour, LPGA Tour, USGA (U.S. Open/U.S. Amateur) and the PGA of America (PGA Championship) can turn a profit and survive without a sufficient amount of spectators in attendance, not to mention corporate hospitality commitments. I'm sure there are those amongst our group that have intimate knowledge of how revenue sharing on the PGA Tour works and would know if the t
our could survive on just TV and sponsorship dollars alone. The big loser in this to me outside of the fans are the local charities the PGA Tour donates money to, as I have to believe a big percentage of that revenue comes from ticket, concession and merchandise sales.The Masters is an entity unto itself. I suspect the ANGC would survive just fine without a single spectator on the course to watch the event, as they have a pretty rich TV contract in addition to a lot of sponsorship money. Thoughts?