HOUSTON – USA Olympian Patrick Reed, the No. 22 ranked pro golfer in the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup points standings, was admitted Friday to Houston Methodist Hospital as his heath rapidly declined due to bilateral interstitial pneumonia, often referred to as “double pneumonia.”
Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis and golfchannel.com writer Rex Hoggard first reported Reed’s condition, which is considered a “very serious infection that can inflame and scar lungs.”
“It got really bad very quickly,” Reed’s wife, Justine, told Lewis.
Reed played in The Open in the United Kingdom, the 3M in Minnesota, then was called upon by Team USA to fill Bryson DeChambeau’s spot on the US Olympic golf team in Tokyo and then returned to the United States and played at the WGC-FedEx-St. Jude tournament in Memphis.
After the WGC-FedEx-St. Jude, Reed did not play in the Wyndham Championship, withdrawing from a tournament only two days before it started. Reed won the Wyndham in 2013. A week later, again on short notice, Reed withdrew from the Northern Trust, the first round of the FedEx Cup Playoffs. His withdrawal from the event placed his chances to participate for the USA in the Ryder Cup in serious doubt. Should his health improve, there would be a slight chance of being added to the USA team with a captain’s pick.
Today, via written statement, Reed confirmed he will not be able to play in the BMW Championship later this week, thus ending his season because of such a slight chance of playing in the PGA Tour’s Championship in Atlanta. It also severely limits his chances to make the USA Ryder Cup team. Reed had cited an “ankle injury” as the reason for withdrawing from the Northern Trust.
“I’m on the road to recovery,” Reed said in his statement. “Once I’m cleared from the doctors, I look forward to returning. I wish you all the best and I can’t wait to get back out there.”
In the statements and communications, the pneumonia case or complications of Reed’s condition as it might relate to COVID-19 and the disease was not mentioned in the statements, although a severe case of double pneumonia is frequently the end result of the coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) and it can be quite dangerous. The optimistic words of improvement bode well for Reed’s overall health but such a severe condition will likely shut down his golf game for the few remaining weeks of the PGA Tour season.
Should the double pneumonia be the result of a COVID-19 infection, Reed would rank as the most acclaimed United States professional athlete from any sport to suffer such a severe case from the conditions effecting the human respiratory system.