Sunday News

Golf ‘locked in’ for Olympics in 2020

- TONY JIMENEZ

LADIES European Tour (LET) chief executive Ivan Khodabakhs­h has dismissed the idea that golf will be excluded from the 2020 Tokyo Olympics after a British bookmaker offered odds of 10-1 on the prospect.

A host of big-name male withdrawal­s from next month’s Games in Rio de Janeiro including the top four in the world, Jason Day, Dustin Johnson, Jordan Spieth and Rory McIlroy, has caused a media frenzy at this week’s British Open.

Ladbrokes reacted to the furore by opening a book on the possibilit­y of golf, which is returning to the Olympics in August for the first time since 1904, being excluded in Japan.

‘‘For Tokyo it is a confirmed sport 100 percent, golf will be there,’’ Khodabakhs­h said at Royal Troon. ‘‘It is now more about how we position golf in the future beyond Tokyo.

‘‘Right now the stage has gone to those who, for whatever reason, are saying they can’t make it. Once the Games start though it is all going to be about those who are there competing for their country.’’ Day, Johnson and McIlroy pulled out because of the threat from the Zika outbreak in the Americas while Spieth opted not to go to Rio for more general health reasons.

The mosquito-borne virus can potentiall­y cause severe birth defects in babies whose mothers are infected during pregnancy.

While the men’s event in Rio will be decimated by no-shows, world No 1 Lydia Ko, of New Zealand, is to lead an almost fullstreng­th lineup of female players in Brazil.

‘‘If anything Zika should be a concern for female golfers and athletes and it’s amazing the positive feedback we’ve had from our LET players,’’ Khodabakhs­h said.

‘‘We’ve received all the health informatio­n from the IGF [Internatio­nal Golf Federation] and IOC [Internatio­nal Olympic Committee] and the overwhelmi­ng feedback we had was ‘we will never let a mosquito come between us fulfilling our dreams’.

‘‘I could understand unease from any female athletes, especially young ones, when it comes to the virus,’’ said the 49-year-old German.

‘‘The bottom line is that it’s not good news that male players are REUTERS GETTY IMAGES withdrawin­g but there are so many players who are excited to be a part of Rio.’’

Khodabakhs­h said all the tours and associatio­ns in golf were united in their support of the Olympics and would combine to show players in the future how important it is to grow their sport.

‘‘We have to put all this in perspectiv­e, we look back to when tennis returned to the Olympics in 1988 and the topic of conversati­on was ‘is it as big as a grand slam’?’’, he added.

‘‘But it’s not a fair comparison. It’s about chasing an Olympic medal, it’s about the Olympic Games. It’s a different experience.

‘‘The four tennis grand slams will always stand as they are, the same way the four golfing majors will always stand as they are, but we hope golf can be much faster than tennis in positionin­g itself in the Olympic programme,’’ said Khodabakhs­h.

‘‘From what I can recall there weren’t many of the top 10 tennis players competing in the 1988 Games. When the Olympics start next month people will start talking about who’s there, rather than who’s not there.’’

 ??  ?? American Jordan Spieth is one of a number of top golfers skipping the Rio Olympics.
American Jordan Spieth is one of a number of top golfers skipping the Rio Olympics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand