Golf at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Men's individual

The men's golf tournament at the 2016 Summer Olympics took place at the Olympic Golf Course (Portuguese: Campo Olímpico de Golfe), built within the Reserva de Marapendi in the Barra da Tijuca zone, between 11 and 14 August 2016. It was the first such tournament in 112 years.

Men's golf
at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad
View of the Olympic Golf Course in Barra da Tijuca, the venue of the men's golf tournament.
VenueOlympic Golf Course
Dates11–14 August 2016
Competitors60 from 34 nations
Winning score268 (−16)
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Justin Rose Great Britain
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Henrik Stenson Sweden
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Matt Kuchar United States
← 1904
2020 →

Sixty players took part in four rounds of stroke play. Justin Rose of Great Britain won the gold medal by two strokes over silver medalist Henrik Stenson of Sweden.[1][2] It was the first gold medal for Great Britain (which had previously earned silver and bronze in 1900) and first medal of any color for Sweden, making its debut in the event. Matt Kuchar of the United States was one stroke behind Stenson and won the bronze medal.[3][4] This put the American podium streak at 3 Games—and 116 years—long.

The tournament carried Official World Golf Ranking points.[5] Rose went from 12th to 9th in the rankings as a result while Stenson went from 5th to 4th and Kuchar went from 20th to 15th.[6]

Background

The first Olympic golf tournaments took place at the second modern Games in Paris 1900. Men's and women's events were held. Golf was featured again at the next Games, St. Louis 1904 with men's events (an individual tournament as well as a team event). The 1908 Games in London were also supposed to have a men's golf competition, but a dispute led to a boycott by all of the host nation's golfers, leaving only a single international competitor and resulting in the cancellation of the event. Golf would disappear from the Olympic programme from then until returning with this event.[7]

Many of the top players withdrew over concerns about Zika fever.[7] Bubba Watson, the world number 5, was the highest-ranked golfer to compete.

30 of the 34 participating nations were making their debut. The United States was the only nation to have previously competed at both of the men's individual golf tournaments in 1900 and 1904, making its third appearance in 2016. Canada (1904), France (1900), and Great Britain (1900) had each competed once previously, making their second appearance here.

Qualification

Each country qualified from one to four athletes based on World Rankings. The top 60 golfers, subject to limits per nation and guarantees for the host and continental representation, were selected. A nation could have three or four golfers if they were all in the top 15 of the rankings; otherwise, each nation was limited to two golfers. One spot was guaranteed for the host nation and five spots were guaranteed to ensure that each Olympic continent had at least one representative. Neither the host nor the continental guarantees turned out to be necessary, with Brazil qualifying one golfers normally and each continent having at least two golfers qualified.

Competition format

The tournament was a four-round stroke play tournament, with the lowest score over the total 72 holes winning.

Schedule

All times are Brasília Time (UTC-03:00)

DateTimeRound
Thursday, 11 August 2016First round
Friday, 12 August 2016Second round
Saturday, 13 August 2016Third round
Sunday, 14 August 2016Final round

Results

First round

Thursday, 11 August 2016

Marcus Fraser of Australia recorded nine birdies on his way to a round of 63 (−8) and a three-shot lead.[8] Justin Rose of Great Britain became the first player to make a hole-in-one at the Games.[9][10][11]

RankPlayerNationScoreTo par
1Marcus Fraser  Australia63−8
T2Graham DeLaet  Canada66−5
Henrik Stenson  Sweden
T4Thomas Pieters  Belgium67−4
Grégory Bourdy  France
Alex Čejka  Germany
Justin Rose  Great Britain
Rafa Cabrera-Bello  Spain
T9An Byeong-hun  South Korea68−3
Nicolas Colsaerts  Belgium

Second round

Friday, 12 August 2016

Marcus Fraser of Australia carded four birdies and two bogeys for a round of 69 (−2) and saw his lead reduced to one shot.[9][12]

RankPlayerNationScoreTo par
1Marcus Fraser  Australia63-69=132−10
2Thomas Pieters  Belgium67-66=133−9
3Henrik Stenson  Sweden66-68=134−8
T4Grégory Bourdy  France67-69=136−6
Justin Rose  Great Britain67-69=136
T6Rafa Cabrera-Bello  Spain67-70=137−5
Graham DeLaet  Canada66-71=137
Danny Lee  New Zealand72-65=137
Fabián Gómez  Argentina70-67=137
T10Pan Cheng-tsung  Chinese Taipei69-69=138−4
Thorbjørn Olesen  Denmark70-68=138
Alex Čejka  Germany67-71=138
Séamus Power  Ireland71-67=138

Third round

Saturday, 13 August 2016

Rose fired a 65 (−6) including two eagles to take a one-shot lead over world number five Henrik Stenson into the final round.[9] South Africa's Jaco van Zyl, meanwhile, made a hole in one of his own at the 8th.[13][14]

RankPlayerNationScoreTo par
1Justin Rose  Great Britain67-69-65=201−12
2Henrik Stenson  Sweden66-68-68=202−11
3Marcus Fraser  Australia63-69-72=204−9
T4Bubba Watson  United States73-67-67=207−6
David Lingmerth  Sweden69-70-68=207
Emiliano Grillo  Argentina70-69-68=207
T7Mikko Ilonen  Finland73-69-66=208−5
Pádraig Harrington  Ireland70-71-67=208
Matt Kuchar  United States69-70-69=208
Grégory Bourdy  France67-69-72=208
Rafa Cabrera-Bello  Spain67-70-71=208

Final round

Sunday, 14 August 2016

Rose and Stenson continued to battle in the final group of the day and were tied at −15 going to the 18th. Rose then produced a backspin approach that left him with a 2.5-foot putt, and Stenson underhit his approach and eventually three-putted for bogey, leaving Rose with two putts to win the gold. He made the first for birdie to secure the win, becoming the first golfer to win Olympic gold in 112 years.[15]

It was Rose's first tournament win in 10 months, having won the UBS Hong Kong Open the previous October. American Matt Kuchar, who had entered the final round tied for seventh, shot a 63 (−8) to take bronze.[16]

RankPlayerNationRd 1Rd 2Rd 3Rd 4TotalTo par
Justin Rose  Great Britain67696567268−16
Henrik Stenson  Sweden66686868270−14
Matt Kuchar  United States69706963271−13
4Thomas Pieters  Belgium67667765275−9
T5Marcus Fraser  Australia63697272276−8
Rafa Cabrera-Bello  Spain67707168
Kiradech Aphibarnrat  Thailand71696967
T8Emiliano Grillo  Argentina70696870277−7
Bubba Watson  United States73676770
Sergio García  Spain69727066
T11An Byeong-hun  South Korea68727068278−6
David Lingmerth  Sweden69706871
Patrick Reed  United States72697364
Bernd Wiesberger  Austria74676968
T15Fabián Gómez  Argentina70677369279−5
Thongchai Jaidee  Thailand70756767
Martin Kaymer  Germany69727266
Séamus Power  Ireland71677467
Fabrizio Zanotti  Paraguay70746867
20Graham DeLaet  Canada66717469280−4
T21Grégory Bourdy  France67697273281−3
Alex Čejka  Germany67717469
Pádraig Harrington  Ireland70716773
Yuta Ikeda  Japan74696969
Søren Kjeldsen  Denmark73687070
Mikko Ilonen  Finland73696673
T27Danny Lee  New Zealand72657669282−2
Joost Luiten  Netherlands72707070
Matteo Manassero  Italy69737169
T30Nino Bertasio  Italy72727168283−1
Nicolas Colsaerts  Belgium68717173
Rodolfo Cazaubón  Mexico76666873
David Hearn  Canada73707466
Thorbjørn Olesen  Denmark70687471
Pan Cheng-tsung  Chinese Taipei69697174
Wu Ashun  China74717068
T37Rickie Fowler  United States75716474284E
Danny Willett  Great Britain71706974
T39Felipe Aguilar  Chile71717568285+1
Adilson da Silva  Brazil72717369
Ryan Fox  New Zealand70737468
Scott Hend  Australia74697171
T43Roope Kakko  Finland72766870286+2
Espen Kofstad  Norway72766969
Wang Jeung-hun  South Korea70727767
Jaco van Zyl  South Africa71747071
47Gavin Green  Malaysia73747268287+3
T48Danny Chia  Malaysia73707669288+4
José-Filipe Lima  Portugal70707771
T50Jhonattan Vegas  Venezuela72767170289+5
Shiv Chawrasia  India71716978
Li Haotong  China70737175
53Miguel Tabuena  Philippines73757370291+7
54Shingo Katayama  Japan74757766292+8
T55Julien Quesne  France71797271293+9
Brandon Stone  South Africa75727175
57Anirban Lahiri  India74737572294+10
58Siddikur Rahman  Bangladesh75707575295+11
59Ricardo Gouveia  Portugal73687680297+13
WDLin Wen-tang  Chinese Taipei7777DNFDNF154DNF

References