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July 2009
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I have covered four Olympics now for KING5 News. Sydney, Salt Lake, Athens and Torino. And I just love the work. I am a sucker for the grandeur and the craziness of the event, the high-minded competition as well as the petty bickering and cheating and skullduggery that always goes on. It is great theater on a grand international stage. The International Olympic Committee picks the sports for the games. Badminton, Team Handball, Three Position Air Rifle, Biathlon (the combination of cross country skiing and shooting) and Synchronized Swimming are all part of the current Olympic list. Great sports in their own right, of course, but I think it is time for an addition. Here's my suggestion to the IOC... An open letter to the International Olympic Committee: Wake up and smell the Hybrids, folks, it is time to play golf. Time to put this sport back on the Olympic list, to tee it up with the trumpets blaring and the flags flying and the medals-podium looming and nationalism bleeding and braying all over the course. The Olympic credo, “Citius, Altius, Fortius” should be cheerfully expanded to “Citius, Altius, Fortius, Birdius”, or loosely translated “higher, faster, stronger and who has the balls to go for the 18th green in two with the world watching and a gold medal in the balance?” It could be great, really great and it wouldn’t be that hard to do. Might just bring a few more sports fans to the Olympic table, too. Golf is a huge participant and spectator sport worldwide these days with an estimated 50-60 million people banging away on a regular basis on seaside links and flawless country club tracks and dog-eared munis all over the world. Think your television ratings for Team Handball, Badminton, Field Hockey and Luge are off the charts? Just imagine a simple match-play format that dumps, say, Vijay Singh, Jumbo Ozaki, Ernie Els and Tiger Woods into a one-day, two-round final-four competition; Annika Sorenstam, Lorena Ochoa Julie Inkster and Natalie Gulbis on the women’s side. Throw in a one-day team competition and you have the potential for some wonderful golf and some sporting moments worthy of the Olympic Games. But that’s the back end of the process. Let’s start at the beginning and let’s assume we want to fill a 64 player field for both the men and the women. Fill the first 32 slots using the current World Rankings. Make up the remaining half with players who qualify for the privilege (yes, let’s remember it’s a privilege to represent your country at the Olympics) in a stroke-play competition held in the weeks before the Games. Using today’s World Rankings (for men) the first group would include players from 12 countries in North America, South America, Scandinavia, Europe, Asia and Oceania (or whatever it is you want to call Australia, New Zealand, Fiji and the rest of paradise in the South Pacific). 7 countries, including rising powerhouse, Paraguay would be represented among women players. If the top players don’t want to compete then you just keep bumping down the list until you find those who do, and if you get to the 100th ranked player and haven’t found 32 golfers willing to give up playing in the Greater Tasmanian Open or the Tidee-Bowl Shootout or the Flemish Rolex Euro-cup or some other tournament that conflicts with the Olympics once every four years then the remaining slots got to the people who want to try to win their way into the event. No, there wouldn’t be much prize-money, if any for the pros to chase but then how many of them really need another week’s paycheck from the Tour? And how many might jump at the chance to win the first Olympic golf medal in more than a century? And consider that advertisers fairly drool over the chance to climb on the Olympic Medal bandwagon so a good performance won’t exactly hurt the pocketbook Also, any pictures of flag-draped, dewy-eyed superstars marching in the opening ceremonies singing the anthem will surely play well back home, wherever home is. Quality images for those seeking marketing opportunities and career-boosting “Golf is great” commercial spots. And maybe a few will even do it for all the right reasons and none of the above. Don’t worry about the field being watered down. If Phil and Ernie and Colin don’t want to play, well, maybe Sergio and Retief and Tiger will. The lure of Olympic competition has drawn tremendous fields made up of top professionals for Tennis, Cycling, Hockey, Basketball and other sports. And for the 32 “Monday Qualifiers” who make it in, it will be the thrill of a lifetime. Those positions should be split up and spread out around the world, with the regional golf associations determining the qualifying standards. And let’s save 4 of those slots for the over-50 crowd. Wouldn’t you love to see a fired-up Watson or Aoki or Irwin making a gallant run through a match-play format? It’s golf after all and it’s head-to-head golf and improbable things happen nearly every round. So, Ladies and Gentlemen of the I.O.C., imagine that 64 players arrive in London in 2012. Or Antwerp in 2016. Or Topeka in 2020: wherever and whenever you wise up to the opportunities and star-power of the sport. Individual match-pay competition will be a three-day event. with the players drawn from the World Rankings seeded 1-32 and the qualifiers (somebody will figure out a formula for this, just not me, today) seeded 33-64. Two rounds the first day will cut the field to 16, two rounds the second day will produce your “Final Four” and day three will crown the first Olympic golf champion since Canadian George Lyon beat American H. Chandler Egan back in 1904 in Saint Louis. On day four you hold the team event. I propose that every country which has qualified a player for the Games gets a shot here. Each country selects three players, with countries not qualifying that many for the match-play tournament being allowed to add competitors to make up a trio. Each country plays as a threesome with the two best balls on each hole making up the team score. One day, one round, one chance at international golf bragging rights. Play 18 holes, crown a winner, hand out the medals, have a few beers and go home. This would be a wide-open, go-for-broke game and anybody could win. How do you like Spain’s chances with Sergio, Jose Maria and Miguel Jimenez? How about South Africa rolling out a line-up of Goosen, Els and Immelman? Or Australia teeing-up Appleby, Allenby and Scott? Woods, Watson and Lefty defending the stars and stripes? What a blast. The possibilities are endless, the prospect delightful. I appreciate your consideration of this modest proposal and respectfully await your response. Maybe you can find the time to look into it after you’ve finished tweaking the rules for the Three-Position Air Rifle competition and the Team Synchronized Swimming. Have a nice day. See you in Beijing. Allen Schauffler 4 Comments |
Interesting concept, Allen...but how about instead of having the pros play (and trying to pique their indifferent interest levels), the players are selected from the amateur ranks (with maybe one slot per team reserved for a senior player)? There must be rankings, since international competitions (Walker Cup, etc) already exist. I've got to believe that amateur golfers would bring significantly more passion and pride to the event than the overpaid pros currently do in Ryder Cup-type competitions or the World Golf Championship events.
Interesting suggestion. Yes, the top international amateurs would make for great competition and I would be perfectly content if that happened. But I would still like to give the pros a chance to play. Remember, Tiger Woods is, by some accounts, the most recognized person on the planet and there is no denying his magnetism and star power. He would be the "big get" for Olympic golf, if in fact the sport was included while he was still playing competitively. But even without him, I think enough top-flight players from here and other countries would be willing to play that it would be great drama. Think of Mickelson and Singh and the Ozaki brothers and Sergio Garcia and Shingo Katayama and the young Brits and Aussies. Surely enough of them would want to have a go at the thing.
And having the top-flight amateurs included as well would be a great complement to the field. They could certainly be included in the competition for the 32 "qualifier" spots and it would be wonderful to have a fresh face and someone with a great story ripping through a match play format where it's one-on-one and anything can happen!
I just love pondering the possibilities..
Golfing is NOT a "Sport". It is a competitive pass time "GAME". However, it would be fun to watch amateurs compete in an Olympic type atmosphere.
OK Cheryl, agreed....but can we also agree that rhythmic gymastics and syncronized swimming and softball and curling, etc, etc, also don't qualify under the same criteria?