Patrick Reed’s pneumonia was much more harrowing than many imagined

Patrick Reed’s pneumonia was much more harrowing than many imagined
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ATLANTA – Patrick Reed’s time in a Houston-area hospital last month with bilateral pneumonia was much more harrowing than many imagined.

 

“The first couple days they were sitting there telling me to make sure you text your family quite a bit, talk to your family, because you just don’t know,” Reed said Thursday at the Tour Championship. “I mean, this is not good. We’re not in a good spot right now.”

Reed was admitted to Houston Methodist Hospital on Aug. 20 and spent “five or six days” battling the pneumonia alone.

“They won’t allow people in there, so it’s only you in there,” he said. “I’m sitting there and those first two days the only thing that was going through my mind is, I’m not going to be able to tell my kids goodbye. I’m not going to be able to tell them I love them. I’m not going to be able to tell my wife that I love her and give her a hug.”

Reed, who withdrew from the first post-season event and did not play last week at the BMW Championship, said he began to recover quickly after being released from the hospital and started practicing on Monday before driving to Atlanta for this week’s playoff finale.


Full-field scores from the Tour Championship


At 30th on the postseason points list, Reed has little chance to win the FedExCup. But at 11th on the U.S. Ryder Cup point list, he has one last opportunity to impress captain Steve Stricker and land a captain’s pick into this month’s matches. Reed, who shot a first-round 72 at East Lake, conceded that the Ryder Cup is the only reason he’s playing this week.

Reed also was asked if he was diagnosed with COVID-19.

“They never tested me. I don’t know,” he said. “I got tested when I was leaving [the hospital] and I tested negative. So that’s always a positive. When I went into the ER and with the scans and everything they have done, did on my lungs and everything, their main priority was to make sure that we fought this pneumonia in both lungs because of how fatal it can be.”

Reed said he is fully vaccinated for COVID-19.





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