Golf’s Shambolic History in the Olympics

With golf likely to make a return at the 2016 Summer Games, Dr Milton Wayne recounts the two previous occasions when competitors teed it up with gold medals at stake

The lack of female representation aside, this might sound all well and good, but there was a problem: lack of international participation. The men’s events attracted 77 entrants, but 74 were from the host nation with the other three journeying from neighbouring Canada.
The team event was a fiasco from the start, with only two 10-man teams entering – both from the US. However, some of the stragglers got together to create – wait for it – another US team. In a shock result, the US won gold, silver and bronze medals over the two rounds played. Gold went to the “Western” team, silver to “Trans-Mississippi” and bronze to the “USGA”. The Western team ran out deserved winners, taking four of the top-five individual scores, with reigning US Amateur champion Chandler Egan well clear at the head of the field with a score of 165. At the other end, Nat Moore, one of the lesser players in the Western team, managed to bag a share of Olympic team gold after scoring a total of 188; perhaps more incredibly, a character named George Oliver claimed a team bronze, despite having shot a woeful 206.

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