Making the Olympics a challenge for LIV golfers

LIV Golf isn't getting world ranking points and that makes it tough for its players to get into the majors. Overlooked in the reaction to the ranking points decision was another big event.

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Sports

October 24, 2023 - 3:13 PM

Xander Schauffele plays a shot during the second round of the TOUR Championship at East Lake Golf Club on Friday, Aug. 26, 2022, in Atlanta. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images/TNS)

Eighteen players from LIV Golf competed in the Masters, a number that already has been cut in half for next year. Only past Masters champions and recent major champions are currently eligible. Everyone else is well out of the top 50 in the world.

It figures to be like that at the other majors, too. When the Official World Golf Ranking committee rejected LIV’s application, it made it tough for them to get into the majors.

Overlooked in the reaction to the OWGR’s decision was another major event. It’s going to be even tougher for LIV players to get into the Olympics next year in Paris.

The Olympic Golf Ranking for the 2024 Games began June 13, 2022, two days after LIV Golf finished its inaugural event outside London.

LIV players can argue with anyone willing to listen that the world ranking no longer has credibility without them. They can plead with the four majors to create a pathway for their top players to get into their championships.

But there’s no turning back the clock on the Olympic ranking, which already is 16 months into a two-year system that long ago was approved by the International Olympic Committee.

The 60-man field at Kasumigaseki Country Club outside Tokyo had 11 players who since have signed up for Saudi cash that LIV Golf provides. That includes Sebastian Munoz of Colombia and Paul Casey of England, both of whom lost in a seven-way playoff for the bronze at the Tokyo Olympics.

“The golfers that passed on it, I’ve got no words for them,” Casey said that day. “All I would say is that I think representing your country is the greatest thing can you do.”

That’s what they gave up by joining LIV, and maybe they’re OK with that. Golf returned to the Olympics in 2016 after a 112-year absence, though both editions in Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo offered enough evidence that golf is a good fit for the games.

Players who skipped Rio out of fear (the Zika virus) or apathy swore they wouldn’t miss it again. “I’ve never tried so hard in my life to finish third,” said Rory McIlroy, one of the Olympic converts, after missing out in the playoff for the bronze.

Some won’t even get that choice.

The 60-man field is taken straight from the June 17, 2024, world ranking — a maximum of two players from each country, or four players if all are within the top 15.

With just under five months to go, eight players from LIV are currently among the top 60 in the Olympic Golf Ranking — Cameron Smith of Australia, Joaquin Niemann and Mito Pereira of Chile.

, Abraham Ancer of Mexico, Thomas Pieters of Belgium, Anirban Lahiri of India, Scott Vincent of Zimbabwe and Munoz.

“We’re not playing for any money, but I mean, a medal for your country … it’s just so cool,” Ancer said after he finished three shots out of the bronze medal playoff in Japan. “I can’t wait to be back.”

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