I’ll Admit It: Olympic Golf Is Growing On Me
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I’ll Admit It: Olympic Golf Is Growing On Me

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I’ll Admit It: Olympic Golf Is Growing On Me

I’ve long been a skeptic of Olympic golf.

Maybe it’s because the format strangely has no team element, or because the top players were slow to embrace the tournament. Or, as straightforward as this is, maybe Olympic golf is just new. The majors have ample history; Olympic golf lacks some of that context.

But after watching Sunday’s epic final round in Paris, I have to admit I’m reassessing my view that the tournament is on par with a second-tier PGA Tour event.

Will it ever be at the level of a major? Probably not. Still, I’m thinking Olympic golf might be on a trajectory to zoom past the FedEx Cup, Presidents Cup and even a few coveted Tour stops.

Here are five reasons why I’m reconsidering my stance.

1. It’s obvious the players genuinely care

I watch sports to see passionate, gifted athletes who try to achieve something they desperately want.

Money is secondary. You could tell me an athlete is playing for $100 million or $10—it all comes down to the emotion involved.

Olympic golf has that emotion. It has Scottie Scheffler crying at the podium after getting his gold medal. (Contrast that with cringe-worthy LIV celebrations as players spray each other with champagne.) It has Jon Rahm in shambles after blowing a four-stroke lead on the back nine. It has Tom Kim, who needed a medal to avoid mandatory military service in his home country of South Korea, breaking down in the scoring tent after coming up short of bronze.

That is interesting. It’s a huge part of why the majors are elevated. The stakes are high, even without the cash on the line.

I’m not sure we fully witnessed this with Olympic golf until last weekend. And I don’t think we see that emotion often enough with regular Tour events, particularly as talk of money has become so ubiquitous.

2. Its history of winners suddenly looks impressive

Scarcity might become powerful when it comes to golf in the Olympics.

There are so few chances for a player to win a medal. There have been three gold medal winners since golf was reintroduced to the Games back in 2016: Justin Rose, Xander Schauffele and Scottie Scheffler.

That is now an elite group of players, especially since Schauffele’s stock has been rising after winning two majors this season. Rose, Schauffele and Scheffler have five majors between them.

I can see it becoming a more valued piece of the resume as time goes on—there will inevitably be some great players who never win a medal. When you potentially only have three or four chances in an entire career, the pressure increases.

3. The host sites are about to get better

Nothing against Le Golf National but Riviera Country Club will be a significant step up when the 2028 Summer Games come to Los Angeles four years from now.

Riviera is one of the best courses in the world and it’s a universally loved Tour stop. We usually see it in February but getting it in August will likely be even better as firmer conditions could be presented.

The crowds should build upon what we saw in Paris last week. Also, we now have the memory of the 2024 playing that had one of the most chaotic finishes to a tournament that we’ve seen. Add in the possibility of a new mixed team event coming in 2028 and we have some positive momentum cooking.

Hopefully the dreadful qualifying system will be fixed by then—every top player should be there. That is something to look forward to as we get closer.

And eight years from now, the Games will be in Australia where some of the finest golf in the world resides. It has potential to be even bigger considering how the best pro golfers rarely visit Australia.

4. There is one fascinating part of the format

I hadn’t considered this much until last week but Olympic golf is perhaps the only high-level stroke-play tournament in the world where nothing matters except being in the top three spots.

In a regular Tour event, a player might start the final round tied for 15th and seven shots back of the lead. There is almost no shot of winning but there is still a paycheck coming. In majors, a player’s finishing position might be worth a Masters invite or a bevy of world ranking points.

Olympic golf has no meaningful paycheck. Scheffler won only $38,000, which is a rounding error for him. Players do earn some money depending on the country they represent but it’s not anywhere near enough to sway strategy.

Everyone behind the leaders can be aggressive. There is nothing to lose.

That adds two intriguing elements: the hunters have total freedom and the hunted are a couple of mistakes away from losing everything.

We saw that on Sunday as Scheffler shot 62 to zoom past everyone while Rahm fell apart late, failing to capture a medal.

The biggest drawback is you have players miles off the lead who are going through the motions. That is why I wish a team element would be introduced so more players are involved on Sunday.

5. It has flavors of the Ryder Cup—but nearly guaranteed drama

I’m not saying Olympic golf is on the same level as the Ryder Cup. There is a long way to go to reach that point.

McIlroy thinks it is approaching the same category, however.

“I still think that the Ryder Cup is the best tournament that we have in our game, pure competition, and I think this has the potential to be right up there with it,” he said. “I think with how much of a sh-t show the game of golf is right now and you think about the two tournaments that might be the purest form of competition in our sport, we don’t play for money in it.”

That’s a strong endorsement—and Olympic golf arguably has more drama than the Ryder Cup.

Every Ryder Cup win since 2014 has been by a substantial margin and the home side has five consecutive victories. Olympic golf has parts of the Ryder Cup’s emotion—playing for your country on a big stage—and the added bonus of virtually guaranteeing final-round drama.

It is hard for three players to separate far enough from the rest of the field to remove excitement. Even if they do, there could still be competition to see how gold, silver and bronze shake out.

With how many tournaments struggle to find back-nine drama—even the Masters has been mostly bereft of those famous roars in recent years—Olympic golf has an advantage there.

What do you think of golf in the Olympics? Did this year’s event change your mind at all?

Let me know below in the comments.

Top Photo Caption: Tommy Fleetwood, Scottie Scheffler and Hideki Matsuyama hold their medals up. (GETTY IMAGES/Keyur Khamar)

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

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Sean Fairholm

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      Lefthook

      2 years ago

      Olympics golf should have Amateur’s competing, same as basketball have an age limit like the soccer does!

      and yes it is the perfect opportunity to run a mixed teams event

      Reply

      Kenny

      2 years ago

      I was also slow to warm up to Olympic golf, but this week turned me around. It obviously meant a lot to the players and it was exciting to watch. I like the 72 hole stroke play format. A team component would be interesting, but there is no need for some goofy convoluted format.

      Reply

      DT

      2 years ago

      Jones doesn’t have one. Neither does Hogan, Nicklaus, Palmer or Watson but I would bet if you asked them, they would have jumped at the chance to play in the Olympics and win a gold medal.

      Reply

      DT

      2 years ago

      All that was missing is a country team element. It is always great watching Scheffflers foot work as he hits it close time after time after time………..

      Reply

      Rob

      2 years ago

      ‘on par with a mid level tour event’ is a wild take… I didn’t see Scheffler cry after any of his numerous tour wins this year. Outside of the US nobody is referring to the players as a ‘fifth major’ so I think globally it’s clear of every tour event (on any tour) but behind the Ryder cup and the four majors. It will only grow in prestige the longer it stays in the Olympics and I do agree that a team event, particularly a mixed one, seems like a no brainer. It wouldn’t need to be 4 days like the stroke play either because they can come up with a unique format.

      Reply

      T. A.

      2 years ago

      Because of the World Handicap system, golf is perhaps the only game/sport in the world where amateurs can compete with professionals and women can compete with men on a relatively even playing field. I’d be interested in seeing a team competition that included each country’s top female and male professional, their top male and female amateur, and their top under 18 female and male players. That’s only 6 players per team, which is nothing compared to many other sports. Naturally, there would have to be a qualifying standard (scratch or better?). We wouldn’t want duffers embarrassing the sport and their countries, right? Each country would be free to use whatever method they chose to select their team.
      I envision a mixed doubles foursomes in a format similar to the Stableford, rather than stroke play, which we see all the time. You would have a draw like match play, except every player would play the entire course and score points for their team via the Stableford format.
      Foursomes would be the male and female pro from two countries, the female and male amateurs from two countries, and the male and female juniors from two countries.
      There would only be two rounds instead of four, with the first round deciding the team competition (combined points of the countries’ 6 golfers) and the second round for individual medals, consisting of players who shot a qualifying score during the first round. This second round might be stroke play, but I think the Stableford system allows for more intrigue throughout the round. You can make up ground faster in such a system, and I thimk it promotes more daring and exciting play.
      Oh well, that’s as.much as I’ve thought about it thus far. I’m sure there are logistical reasons why something like the above wouldn’t work, but it’s a concept that I just started thinking of while reading the article. Thanks for the food for thought!

      Reply

      Hopp

      2 years ago

      I loved it, very interesting golf. Watching another 54 hole collapse by a LIV golfer was fun.

      I want it to stay as it is, no format like LIV.

      Reply

      Mike

      2 years ago

      Were you talking about the US Open and Rory?

      Reply

      Kuso

      2 years ago

      It definitely needs team format with individual scoring one week in the LIV format (but make it 72 holes), and a whole separate week just for match-play, using the first week as qualifying criteria to get into the match-play, with the top 8 teams qualifying.
      But can the PGA Tour fit in the schedule to let their players go away for almost a month away (opening and closing ceremonies) from their Tour? Come on, it’s only once every 4 years, they really should. And if they did that, players might find it a worthwhile adventure

      Reply

      SJC

      2 years ago

      It’s right behind the the majors and before the players. Definitely had an open championship feel with the international commentary. Suspense of possibly playoffs for top 3 spots coming down to every putt at the end was awesome.

      Reply

      Denny Samuelson

      2 years ago

      I’m ambivalent. I didn’t watch at all. Yet seeing the pride and joy of the medalists, I am warming to the idea. I might warm more if the format was changed. We have so much stroke play.

      Reply

      Tricket3d

      2 years ago

      Loved watching the format, but would be great to see qualifying like most of the other sports. I also think it would be good to maybe have two events like the stroke play and maybe a two person format like the Zurich classic. 2 rounds of four ball and two rounds of foursomes.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      2 years ago

      “…maybe Olympic golf is just new…”

      Nope. That’s not it for me. It’s that Olympic golf is NOTHING new. Same ol’ same ol’. 72 holes of medal play. BOH-ring. Add in the stupidity of NOT letting the countries decide for themselves who will represent them, and the IOC gets a big fat F for their iteration of Olympic golf.

      Have never watched it, never will, at least not in this current form.

      Reply

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