Major tours come together to push for Olympic golf

Published: Wednesday, July 16, 2008 12:02 p.m. MDT
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SOUTHPORT, England — Tiger Woods, Olympian?

Golf's major governing bodies stepped up their campaign to get the sport added to the Olympic program in 2016, naming former LPGA commissioner Ty Votaw to lead the effort.

Votaw, now an executive vice president of the PGA Tour, will be loaned out from that post over the next 15 months to represent seven of the bigger hitters in the game: both the American and European tours, Royal & Ancient, LPGA, U.S. Golf Association, PGA of America and Augusta National Golf Club, home of the Masters.

"The time is right for the world of golf to come together for the common good of the sport," Votaw said.

The IOC will decide in October 2009 on possible changes in the Olympic program at the same meeting where it picks the next host city for the Summer Games. The 2016 finalists are Chicago, Tokyo, Rio de Janeiro and Madrid.

Golf hasn't been an Olympic sport since 1904, but a news conference that also featured PGA commissioner Tim Finchem, European tour executive director George O'Grady, and R&A chief executive Peter Dawson showed those at the top are firmly committed to getting back in the Games.

"There's much to be done, and some stiff competition, but we do feel we're putting together the right organization to get the job done," Dawson said.

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Six other sports are vying to get on the 2016 program, including two — baseball and softball — that will be played at the Beijing Games next month. They were dropped for the 2012 London Games, but have petitioned to get back in the Olympics four years later.

The other candidates are rugby, roller sports, squash and karate. The IOC is only expected to add a maximum of two new sports for 2016.

While men's golf already has four major tournaments a year, not to mention the Ryder Cup (U.S. vs. Europe) and Presidents Cup (U.S. vs. the rest of the world) in alternate years, Finchem said getting onto the Olympic program is vital to golf's development.

He cited "the incredible impact it could potentially have on growing the game around the world, particularly in areas that are fledgling in their current development of the game."

Finchem acknowledged that some players have been cool to the idea of adding another major event to their already crowded schedules, floating the idea that it should be a competition for amateurs. But there's no way the IOC will consider golf unless it offers up the top professionals for both men and women.

The best of those is Woods, who would be 40 when the 2016 Games are held. He has expressed mixed feelings about playing in the Olympics, at times pointing to the potential benefits, others times looking at the possible drawbacks.

"There are issues with respect to the structure of the schedule," Finchem said. But he feels those concerns will be wiped away once players are educated on the potential for growth.

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