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Aug 6th, 2020

Thomas Bjørn to walk From #Wentworth2Wales

In Aid Of Unicef and The Golf Foundation

Thomas Bjørn is set for one of the biggest challenges of his career next week when he embarks on a four-day charity walk over 210 kilometres from #Wentworth2Wales to raise funds for Unicef UK’s Save Generation COVID appeal and the Golf Foundation as part of the European Tour’s #GolfforGood initiative.

Inspired by the fundraising exploits in the UK of Sir Tom Moore during the COVID-19 lockdown, Bjørn will carry the Ryder Cup from the European Tour’s Headquarters at Wentworth Club in Surrey to the Celtic Manor Resort in Newport, which will host two consecutive European Tour events as part of the new UK Swing.
The 49-year-old from Denmark will set off from Wentworth Club next Thursday, August 13, the first day of The Celtic Classic and plans to arrive at Celtic Manor on Sunday, August 16, the final day of the tournament. He will then compete in the second tournament to be held at the Celtic Manor Resort, the ISPS Handa Wales Open, on the Twenty Ten Course where Europe memorably defeated the United States 14½-13½ ten years ago.
Bjørn was one of Colin Montgomerie’s vice-captains on that occasion and the 15-time European Tour winner went on to lead Europe in another famous Ryder Cup victory in 2018 when his 12-man team won 17½-10½ at Le Golf National in France.
He will now take on another formidable challenge when he walks from #Wentworth2Wales to raise money for Unicef UK and the Golf Foundation, two causes which have special significance for Bjørn, while he also intends to raise awareness of the health and wellness benefits that can be achieved through golf.
Donations for the #Wentworth2Wales walk can be made at: https://uk.virginmoneygiving.com/Wentworth2Wales
“Like so many fundraising ideas, this all started as a throwaway comment which quickly grew into something which is now very real and, to be honest, quite scary,” smiled Bjørn.

“During lockdown I had started going on some long walks to regain a bit of fitness and also because I find it relieves a lot of mental stress for me. It was around the same time that Captain Tom, now Sir Tom Moore, was doing his incredible walk for the NHS and someone called me ‘Ryder Cup Captain Tom’. We had a bit of a laugh about it but the more I looked at Sir Tom the more I was genuinely inspired by what he was doing so we came up with the idea of doing a fundraising walk of our own.
“We looked at potential routes and Wentworth to Wales made a lot of sense, although I have to admit I didn’t realise it was over 200km! It’s going to be very tough to do it in four days but I suppose the whole point of doing it is that it’s not meant to be easy. If I am going to ask people to donate their hard-earned cash then I need to earn that donation. For me, walking between 10-12 hours a day for four consecutive days will push me to the limit.
“As a Dane who has lived most of my adult life in the UK I wanted to give something back both globally and locally and I feel that UNICEF’s Save Generation Covid appeal and the Golf Foundation are a perfect fit for that.
“I was reading some information from UNICEF recently and they say that coronavirus is the biggest global crisis for children since World War Two and that without urgent action, the coronavirus threatens to reverse 10 years of progress on reducing the number of children dying from preventable causes.
“And being able to raise some funds to help the game of golf continue to thrive as part of the European Tour’s UK swing and through the Golf Foundation is something that means a lot from a personal point of view. Obviously I want to raise as much as possible but no matter how much it is, hopefully, it can raise awareness and help kids around the world.”
Bjørn has already received significant support from BMW, Hilton Hotels, Wentworth Club and LetsGetChecked (who have provided COVID-19 testing resources).
The European Tour’s #GolfforGood initiative is a narrative that will underpin that 2020 season and aims to give back in three key areas:
▪ Supporting the Communities where the European Tour plays.
▪ Rewarding the true heroes, such as the front line workers.
▪ Promoting the many health benefits that golf offers.
The ‘Golf for Good’ initiative was launched at the start of the European Tour’s new ‘UK Swing’, with £500,000 from the European Tour being distributed equally between charities local to the tournament venues and charities chosen by the leading ten players in a mini Order of Merit which runs across the six tournaments.

TAGS: European Tour, Thomas Bjorn, COVID-19, 2020