The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Olympic fix isn’t so simple to introduce

- By Doug Ferguson

RIO DE JANEIRO >> For all the praise of golf’s return to the Olympics, there was no shortage of suggestion­s to make it better.

The easy fix is to introduce a team format.

All golf leaders had to do for the Rio Games was to combine the scores of the top two players from each country to provide a team medal. There would have been 24 teams for the men and women. For the men, Sweden would have won by one shot over the Americans, and Justin Rose’s birdie putt to win the gold medal also would have given Britain the bronze medal by one shot over Spain.

How’s that for an additional layer of drama? If only it were that simple. “We didn’t have time,” said Ty Votaw, vice president of the Internatio­nal Golf Federation.

Votaw said the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee doesn’t allow for two competitio­ns in one. A team format would have had to be a separate competitio­n. Try squeezing that into two weeks, on an 18-hole golf course that was brand new for competitio­n without knowing how much stress it could take.

“The IOC rejected it,” Votaw said.

The other option was to have a team format in place of the individual competitio­n. Sure, that might have enticed some of the countries that skipped out (the Australian­s and South Africans come to mind), but it would have reduced the number of flags raised along the 18th fairway at Olympic Golf Course.

“We thought having the most countries was better than team competitio­n,” he said. “And then someone like Jhonattan Vegas (Venezuela) would not have had a partner.”

Lydia Ko would have been left out, too.

As it was, six medals went to six nations over two weeks. So it wasn’t all that bad.

One element that won’t change — or shouldn’t — is 72 holes of stroke play.

All but a few tournament­s throughout the year use that format, and there’s a reason for that. It remains the best way to measure who played the best golf that week. And that’s what the Olympics should be. Match play is bad for television and leaves spectators only one match to follow at the end, and there’s a history approachin­g 20 years at the Match Play Championsh­ip that illustrate­s how unpredicta­ble it can be.

Any other format would be a gimmick, or best saved for the silly season.

“The last thing the IOC wants is a trial format,” IGF President Peter Dawson said.

The IGF needed to keep it simple in the first year, and it needed support of the top players when making its bid. Votaw won’t rule out the IGF trying to persuade the IOC to reconsider the two-man team played at the same time as the individual competitio­n.

“What we wanted to do is put our best foot forward, and I think we did that,” Votaw said. “We’ll look at all sorts of things. We do have a time issue in terms of how many things we can fit into a two-week period.”

There are a few steps to take before golf starts contemplat­ing any changes.

The IGF president has a limit of three two-year terms, and Dawson’s time is up at the end of the year. The only exception is if the IGF board unanimousl­y votes to keep him on. Dawson wasn’t about to speculate on those prospects.

The next step is making sure golf stays beyond the Tokyo Games in 2020. Golf did its part by staging an exceptiona­l event over two weeks.

 ?? CHRIS CARLSON — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Justin Rose of Great Britain celebrates winning the gold medal during the men’s golf tournament at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio.
CHRIS CARLSON — ASSOCIATED PRESS Justin Rose of Great Britain celebrates winning the gold medal during the men’s golf tournament at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio.

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