Ryder Cup organisers are helping a spectator who said she had been blinded in one eye after being struck by a tee shot hit by American Brooks Koepka during the weekend`s match against Europe, they said on Tuesday.


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Corine Remande said she was unable to see out of her right eye after being hit when Koepka`s drive veered wide of the fairway on the sixth hole on Friday, the opening day of the event. "Doctors told me I had lost the use of that eye," Remande told French news agency AFP.


Remande was treated at the course before being taken to the hospital. U.S. Open champion Koepka stopped to see how she was. "It is distressing to hear that someone might suffer long-term consequences from a ball strike," a Ryder Cup spokesperson said.


Organisers promised to do as much as possible to help. "We are hugely sympathetic and will do everything we can to support the spectator, in so far as that is possible under very difficult circumstances," they said in a statement.


"We have been in communication with the family involved, starting with the immediate on-course treatment and thereafter to provide support, helping with the logistics of repatriation, including providing a transfer for the family from Paris to Lyon. We will continue to offer support for as long as necessary."


Ball strikes in golf are an occasional hazard but serious injuries, as a result, are relatively rare.


"We can confirm that `fore` was shouted several times but also appreciate how hard it can be to know when and where every ball is struck if you are in the crowd," organisers said.


Europe`s triumphant captain Thomas Bjorn said the incident was "upsetting".


"Golf will definitely have to look at anything they can do to protect the fans but I have to say it`s the first time I`ve heard of an incident like this in the time I`ve played," the Dane told Sky Sports News.


"It`s so unfortunate and all our thoughts from me and the team are with her at this moment." 


Tony Finau, who was partnering Koepka when the incident happened at Le Golf National, west of Paris, confirmed that they had yelled "fore" to warn fans the ball was off course.


"Every time you yell fore from that distance nobody is going to hear you," he told Sky Sports News. "People close to the green, unfortunately, they are in play sometimes."


The Royal & Ancient, custodians of golf`s laws and organisers of the British Open, state in the terms and conditions on the back of its Open tickets that spectators "assume all risk" of being struck by a golf ball.