Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting IOC Executive Board recommends golf for 2024 Olympic Games

IOC Executive Board recommends golf for 2024 Olympic Games

Golf’s future in the Olympics is expected to extend into 2024, thanks to a recommendation by the International Olympic Committee’s Executive Board. In a meeting held Friday at IOC headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland, the Executive Board approved the inclusion of all 28 sports that were held at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio. That includes golf, which made its return to the Olympics program after a 112-year absence. The recommendation is scheduled to be ratified by all IOC members at the 130th IOC Session held on Sept. 13 in Lima, Peru. That’s also when the host city for the 2024 Summer Games will be announced – either Paris or Los Angeles. The International Golf Federation released a statement Saturday: “The IGF is gratified to learn of the IOC Executive Board’s decision to include golf in its recommendation for the Olympic Games Programme in 2024. We look forward to learning the outcome of the final vote at the IOC Session in September. “We were always confident that golf would deliver exciting men’s and women’s competitions in Rio de Janeiro and even at that, it exceeded our expectations. Now, we are excited to build upon the success from last year as we prepare for the 2020 Games in Tokyo and, hopefully, beyond.â€� Golf had previously been approved for 2020 in Toyko, with the men’s and women’s competition held at Kasumigaseki Country Club. Golf’s return to the Olympics in Rio was considered a success, especially by the players involved. Justin Rose (gold), Henrik Stenson (silver) and Matt Kuchar (bronze) were the medalists in the men’s competition, with Inbee Park (golf), Lydia Ko (silver) and Shanshan Feng (bronze) grabbing podium spots on the women’s side. In a non-traditional golf country, players were pleased to see a significant amount of fans at the new Olympic course designed by architect Gil Hanse and his team. “To look at the support that was out here, to look at the guys that came through, won medals – I think it speaks for itself,â€� Kuchar said after winning bronze. “This event has gone over, I think, fantastically well.â€� The fan support should be larger in Tokyo. According to a 2015 study by the R&A, there are 2,383 golf facilities in Japan, second most in the world next to the United States. Included among the estimated 10 million golfers in the country are Hideki Matsuyama, the fourth-ranked men’s player in the world, and Harukyo Nomura, ranked 18th among all women’s players. Korean golf fans, who made up a big contingent for the women’s event in Rio, should have an even larger presence in Japan, its next-door neighbor. Eight of the current top 14 women’s players in the world are from South Korea. If Los Angeles gets the 2024 Olympics bid, the host venue is expected to be Riviera Country Club, the annual site of the PGA TOUR’s Genesis Open. If Paris gets the bid, the host venue will be Le Golf National, the host course at next year’s Ryder Cup.

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Quick look at The Greenbrier ClassicQuick look at The Greenbrier Classic

THE OVERVIEW The Old White TPC is the rare PGA TOUR venue that concludes with a par-3, but the unique finishing hole has produced its fair share of dramatics. It started with the first edition of The Greenbrier Classic, and has continued on an annual basis. Stuart Appleby sank an 11-foot birdie putt on the final hole of the 2010 tournament to shoot 59, and he needed every single stroke to squeeze out a one-shot win over Jeff Overton. Appleby was just the second PGA TOUR winner to shoot a 59 in the final round (David Duval, 1999 Bob Hope Classic). Four men were tied after 72 holes at the most recent Greenbrier Classic, in 2015. Danny Lee emerged victorious after a two-hole playoff. Half of the six playings of the PGA TOUR’s visit to West Virginia have ended in a sudden-death playoff. No one has won The Greenbrier by more than two shots. The 175-yard, par-3 18th, and its unique “Thumbprintâ€� green, gives players the opportunity to author an exciting finish, as they stand on the final tee with just a mid- or short-iron in hand. In the past two Greenbrier Classics, three players (Justin Thomas, Bud Cauley and George McNeill) have aced the 18th. The Old White TPC had the second-closest proximity to the hole (30 feet, 8 inches) in the 2014-15 season. Coupled with the par-5 17th, players have an opportunity to make a move on the closing holes, and many have. In 2011, Scott Stallings birdied both the 72nd hole and the first hole of a sudden-death playoff. Ted Potter Jr. won the following year, finishing eagle-birdie to overcome a four-shot deficit with four holes to play. He completed the comeback with a 4-foot birdie putt on the last hole. Robert Streb sank a 6-foot birdie putt – with his sand wedge – to join the playoff in 2015. He had to use the club after his putter broke. The Greenbrier Classic has seen its share of excitement in its brief history, thanks in large part to its historic venue. The Old White TPC, the first 18-hole golf course at The Greenbrier, was designed by Charles Blair Macdonald and opened for play in 1914. The course was named for the well-known Old White Hotel, which stood on the grounds from 1858 through 1922. Macdonald, the father of American golf course architecture, modeled several holes after some of the most famous throughout the British Isles. And now it’s a venue that allows the players of the PGA TOUR to display their skills. He’ll be making his first start since he and his longtime caddie, Jim “Bonesâ€� Mackay, split up. The 2012 champion is back on the Web.com Tour this season as he continues his comeback from an ankle injury, but he ranks fourth on that circuit’s money list. This year’s NCAA champion is making his second PGA TOUR start. How’d he fare in his first? He finished T4 at the FedEx St. Jude Classic. 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