Olympic golf 2024: Saturday final round tee times, TV information for women’s competition

The final group tees off at 6:39 a.m. ET.

It’s all set up to be a doozie of a final round in Paris. With Lydia Ko, the only two-time medal winner in modern Olympic golf tied for the lead, it could be an historic day as the Kiwi looks to become the first player to win all three medals. A gold-medal performance would also put Ko in the LPGA Hall of Fame.

Ko will play in the final group alongside Swiss player Morgane Metraux and American Rose Zhang. Mariajo Uribe, playing in her final round of competitive golf before retirement, plays in the penultimate group with Atthaya Thitikul and Miyu Yamashita.

World No. 1 Nelly Korda will be paired with the French heroine Celine Boutier and Xiyu Lin in the second to last group.

With Round 3 scores all final on the leaderboard, here’s a look at Saturday’s final-round tee times. All times listed are ET. Paris is six hours ahead of ET.

Tee time Players (country)
3 a.m. Ursula Wikstrom (Finland), Leona Maguire (Ireland), Noora Komulainen (Finland)
3:11 a.m. Ines Laklalech (Morocco), Perrine Delacour (France), Maria Fassi (Mexico)
3:22 a.m. Alessandra Fanali (Italy), Ashley Lau (Malaysia), Sara Kouskova (Czech Republic)
3:33 a.m. Emily Kristine Pedersen (Denmark), Paula Reto (South Africa), Anne van Dam (Netherlands)
3:44 a.m. Madelene Stavnar (Norway), Ana Belac (Slovenia), Carlota Ciganda (Spain)
3:55 a.m. Diksha Dagar (India), Stephanie Meadow (Ireland), Alena Sharp (Canada)
4:11 a.m. Alexandra Forsterling (Germany), Aditi Ashok (India), Yuka Saso (Japan)
4:22 a.m. Nanna Koerstz Madsen (Denmark), Sarah Schober (Austria), Shannon Tan (Singapore)
4:33 a.m. Emma Spitz (Austria), Gaby Lopez (Mexico), Charley Hull (Great Britain)
4:44 a.m. Lilia Vu (U.S.), Klara Davidson Spilkova (Czech Republic), Albane Valenzuela (Switzerland)
4:55 a.m. Hyo Joo Kim (Korea), Jin Young Ko (Korea), Celine Borge (Norway)
5:06 a.m. Pei-yun Chien (Chinese Taipei), Linn Grant (Sweden), Georgia Hall (Great Britain)
5:17 a.m. Minjee Lee (Australia), Dottie Ardina (Philippines), Manon De Roey (Belgium)
5:33 a.m. Wei-Ling Hsu (Chinese Taipei), Ashleigh Buhai (South Africa), Azahara Munoz (Spain)
5:44 a.m. Bianca Pagdanganan (Philippines), Patty Tavatanakit (Thailand), Maja Stark (Sweden)
5:55 a.m. Brooke Hendersonn (Canada), Esther Henseleit (Germany), Pia Babnik (Slovenia)
6:06 a.m. Ruoning Yin (China), Hannah Green (Australia), Amy Yang (Korea)
6:17 a.m. Nelly Korda (U.S.), Xiyu Janet Lin (China, Celine Boutier (France)
6:28 a.m. Miyu Yamashita (Japan), Atthaya Thitikul (Thailand), Mariajo Uribe (Colombia)
6:39 a.m. Morgane Metraux (Switzerland), Lydia Ko (New Zealand), Rose Zhang (U.S.)

How to watch

Saturday, Aug. 10

Women’s competition, final round, 3 a.m. ET, Golf ChannelPeacock

2020 Tokyo Olympics: Qualifying system for golf extended with Games moved to 2021

The golf qualifying system for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics was extended after the games were moved to 2021. Here’s what that means.

Tiger Woods was on the outside of making the U.S. golf team for the Tokyo Summer Olympics when the sport spectacle was postponed to 2021 due to the COVID-19 global pandemic.

But Woods has plenty of time to make the team.

The International Golf Federation and International Olympic Committee announced Wednesday an adjustment to the qualifying system that will accommodate the new dates. Golfers now will accumulate Olympic Golf Rankings (OGR) points through June 21, 2021, for the men, and June 28 for the women. Field sizes for both the men and women remain at 60 players.

The Tokyo 2021 Summer Games have been rescheduled for July 23-Aug. 8, with the golf competitions scheduled to be held at Kasumigaseki Country Club.

MEN’S GOLF: Latest standings for men’s golf teams
WOMEN’S GOLF: Latest standings for women’s golf team

The Olympics Golf Rankings are based on the men’s Official World Golf Rankings and the Women’s World Golf Rankings (WWGR). On March 20, however, both rankings were frozen and it has yet to be determined when each will resume.

The top 15 players at the end of the qualifying period will be eligible for the Olympics, with a limit of four players per country. After the top 15, there will be a maximum of two players per country that doesn’t already have two or more players in the top 15. The host country will be guaranteed a spot.

As it stands on the men’s side, the U.S. is one of three countries – the others being England and Australia – with two or more players ranked in the top 15.

The USA would be represented by No. 3 Brooks Koepka, No. 4 Justin Thomas, No. 5 Dustin Johnson and No. 7 Patrick Reed. Johnson, however, said he wouldn’t participate in the 2020 Summer Games, although he might change his mind after the postponement.

The next in line are No. 8 Patrick Cantlay, No. 9 Webb Simpson and then No. 11 Woods, who went to the 1984 Summer Games in Los Angeles when he was 8 and has spoken often of his desire to play in the Olympics. He’ll be 45 next summer so he’s eyeing it as his last shot of making the squad.

No. 12 Xander Schauffele and No. 13 Bryson DeChambeau are also ranked in the top 15. The USA is so loaded that No. 16 Tony Finau, No. 17 Matt Kuchar and No. 18 Gary Woodland are also within grasp of a berth.

Currently on the women’s side, the most notable name not eligible for the Olympics is Inbee Park, who won the gold medal at the 2016 Rio Games when golf returned after a 112-year absence. Park is at No. 11 in the rankings but sits as first alternate behind South Koreans Jin Young Ko, Sung Hyun Park, Sei Young Kim and Jeongeun Lee6.

The American team would be represented by Nelly Korda, Danielle Kang and Lexi Thompson. The host country, Japan, would also have three players: Nasa Hataoka, Hinako Shibuno and Ai Suzuki.

“The fairest and most equitable way to determine the qualifying athletes was to align the previous qualification system with these new dates,” said Antony Scanlon, IGF executive director. “The IGF will continue to work closely with the IOC and Tokyo 2020 to address the other areas that the postponement of the Games affects our sport and our athletes, to develop the necessary plans.”

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Tokyo Olympics will be canceled if coronavirus pandemic continues in 2021

The president of the Olympics organizing committee says if the coronavirus pandemic is not under control by next year they won’t postpone the Olympics again — they’ll cancel them.

The president of the Olympics organizing committee says if the coronavirus pandemic is not under control by next year they won’t postpone the Olympics again — they’ll cancel them.

Japan, IOC facing mounting costs due to postponed 2020 Olympics

The 2020 Tokyo Olympics were already expected to be the most expensive games in Olympic history. But now that they’ve been postponed to 2021 the cost continues to grow.

The 2020 Tokyo Olympics were already expected to be the most expensive games in Olympic history. But now that they’ve been postponed to 2021 the cost continues to grow.

Turkish officials, citing virus infections, blame IOC for not canceling qualifier

Turkish amateur boxing officials blamed the IOC for those who tested positive for the coronvirus after an Olympic qualifier.

An amateur boxing controversy rages over coronavirus just days after the postponement of the Tokyo Olympics until 2021 because of the pandemic.

Boxing federations representing Turkey and Croatia said fighters and coaches tested positive for the virus after returning from an Olympic qualifying tournament that went on for three days in London before organizers suspended it.

Marko Marovic, president of the Croatian federation, says a fighter and two coaches have tested positive.

“Our epidemiologist says they were most likely infected during [the] Tokyo 2020 qualifier,” Marovic told BBC Sports. “Our first concern is the health of our boxing family. We are still praying that everything ends well and there will be no other positive tests.”

Eyup Gozeg, president of the Turkish federation, said two fighters and a coach tested positive.

The boxers and coaches were at the qualifying event, the Copper Box, which began on March 14, the day after soccer was suspended throughout the U.K.  The event went on through March 17. Then, the International Olympic Committee’s Boxing Task Force pulled the plug.

The Turkish federation is calling the IOC’s task force irresponsible, suggesting that the tournament should have been canceled before it began.

“I just want to know, when the whole world was on high alert, why they hosted this event?’’ Turkish Federation Eyup Gozgec told BBC. “We didn’t see any hygienic standards there. There were no preventative measures.”

It’s not clear that the fighters and coaches contracted the virus during the three days of the qualifier. The IOC said its Task Force was “not aware of any link between the competition and the infection”.

According to medical experts, symptoms show up a week to 10 days after getting infected.

In a letter to the European Boxing Confederation, Gozeg wrote: “Two of our athletes [and a coach] have tested positive for [Covid-19] after returning to Turkey from London. All of them are in treatment now and thankfully are in good condition.

“This is the disastrous result of the irresponsibility of the IOC Boxing Task Force.”

In a statement, the IOC said: “Many participants were in independently organized training camps … before the competition started … and have returned home a while ago, so it is not possible to know the source of infection.

“At the time of the European qualifier in London there were many sports and other events going on in Great Britain, because there were no governmental restrictions or advice on public events in place.

“Precautionary measures before, during and in the follow-up phase of the event were implemented and the event was suspended when the Covid-19 situation developed further.’’

It’s official: 2020 Tokyo Olympics postponed due to coronavirus outbreak

Officials told reporters in Tokyo on Tuesday that they have agreed to postpone the 2020 Summer Olympics.

For thousands of athletes around the world, it would have once been considered a nightmare scenario.

And on Tuesday, it finally became official.

In an unprecedented and unavoidable move, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters in Tokyo that he and International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach have agreed to postpone the 2020 Summer Olympics.

According to a tweet from the Japanese Prime Minister’s Office, the two agreed that the Games will not be canceled and “will be held by the summer of 2021.”

It is the first time in modern Olympic history that a global health issue has disrupted the Games.

The announcement followed telephone conversations between Abe, Bach and their respective teams Tuesday. It comes less than 24 hours after long-standing IOC member Dick Pound first told USA TODAY Sports that the Games would not begin as scheduled on July 24.

While the Olympic Games have previously been canceled during periods of war, and complicated by boycotts, this is the first time they have ever been suspended.

The decision to move the multi-billion dollar event will have widespread political, legal, logistical and financial ramifications, both locally in Japan and around the world.

It also figures to cause headaches and heartaches across the international sports community — for federations and leagues that must now adapt their schedules, and for the 11,000 athletes who had spent years training to compete this summer.

Despite its complexities, this path became increasingly inevitable in recent weeks, as the novel coronavirus, also known as COVID-19, continued to spread. The disease, which was first identified in Wuhan, China in December, has now infected people in more than 160 countries around the world, shuttering entire cities and leaving thousands dead.

In the process, it also wreaked havoc on the Olympic qualifying model, forcing several international sports federations and national Olympic committees to postpone or cancel key events. Some athletes and coaches were stranded in foreign countries due to travel restrictions. Training regimens were disrupted. The Greek leg of the Olympic torch relay was held without fans, then canceled.

Yet despite those disruptions, and the rapid spread of the coronavirus, IOC officials and representatives from the Tokyo 2020 organizing committee maintained for months that the Olympics would not be affected. IOC president Thomas Bach urged athletes to continue training as usual, even as questions about the Games continued to swirl.

That determined approach changed as the opening ceremony drew closer and global health concerns about holding the event lingered.

Athletes helped fuel the process by speaking out publicly, or pressuring their sport’s governing body or national Olympic committee to take a stand. In the United States, for example, leaders from swimmingtrack and field and gymnastics all urged the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee to publicly call for postponement, which it later did.

The move to postpone the Games figures to have dramatic financial implications for several stakeholders, including the IOC – whose budget relies in large part on income from broadcast partners related to the Olympics – and Japan, which has already spent more than $28 billion to host these Games, according to the Associated Press.

One Japanese securities firm estimated earlier this month that a cancellation or postponement of the Olympics would reduce the country’s annual growth domestic product growth by 1.4% in 2020.

The IOC has paid insurance premiums north of $12 million in both 2016 and 2018 to protect against the possible disruption of the Olympics, but Bach did not provide a figure for this year’s premium when asked by reporters earlier this month. The IOC had nearly $2 billion in reserve as of its most recent annual report, which was released last summer.

Japanese citizens have embraced their role as hosts of the Games, buying up tickets as soon as they became available. Organizers expected to sell about 7.8 million tickets, with at least 70% of them going to Japanese residents.

Beyond finances, this decision will also cause substantial disruptions for athletes, many of whom have put off college or other opportunities to train full-time with the objective of peaking in July. Now, they will have to put their training on hold. Some might be forced to give them up altogether — their Olympic dreams dashed, a nightmare come true.

What it means for golf

The men’s Olympic golf competition was slated for July 30-Aug. 2 at Kasumigaseki Country Club while the women would have played Aug. 5-8. It’s just the latest competition to come off the calendar in the past two weeks, joining regular-season events on tours all over the world. Three major championships have been impacted so far: the ANA Inspiration was rescheduled from April to September while the Masters and the PGA Championship have been postponed with no new date set.

Olympic golf: Latest men’s standings | Latest women’s standings

When the Games are played, each field will include 60 players. The top 15 players in the Olympic Golf Rankings (basically the Official World Golf Ranking, which are currently frozen in place) would be eligible, with a maximum of four players per country.

There is a maximum of two players per country if that country does not have two or more players ranked in the top 15. Japan, as the host country, is guaranteed two players in the field.

Contributing: Nancy Armour, Rachel Axon, Christine Brennan and The Associated Press

The IOC won’t do the right thing with the Olympics, so nations need to do it for them

The IOC won’t do the right thing with the 2020 Olympics, so nations must join together and force their hand.

If the IOC isn’t going to do the right thing, it’s up to participating nations to do it for them.

The International Olympic Committee has refused to make a decision on the postponement of the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo so far, despite a pandemic of coronavirus which has overwhelmed hospitals, shut down sport leagues worldwide, and threatened to crater the global economy.

Canada became the first country to go ahead and make their own decision this week, announcing Sunday that it would not be sending its athletes to the 2020 Games if they weren’t postponed. The Canadians have shown the way — it’s now up to the other countries to follow suit.

The IOC so far has taken the “let’s cross our fingers and hope this all works out” approach, undoubtedly terrified of the massive logistical nightmare that will come from rescheduling the games. I’m also certain that there are no small financial considerations being taken into account.

But the idea that the world will have beaten COVID-19 by this summer is preposterous. It’s not going to happen. To try and host the games would be reckless, not only for the health of the athletes, but for global health.

(Though, quickly, this virus will also affect athletes. An Olympic swimmer contracted the disease and described it as the “worst virus I have ever endured.” Forget this being something that only affects the elderly or immunocompromised. One of the best athletes alive was left weakened in bed for weeks.)

(EPA-EFE/HANNIBAL HANSCHKE)

For a global health community that is trying to stem the tide of people infected with COVID-19, a novel virus with no built-in immunity … anywhere, the extensive travel and crowding that would come with an Olympic games is like a perfect recipe for a massive outbreak of the disease.

Experts say vaccines could be a year away at least. This isn’t going away anytime soon.

It’s clear, it’s on the individual nations to force the IOC’s hand.

The United States looks like it might be heading in that direction — the USA Track and Field team has already called for the postponement, as has USA Swimming.

There is power in numbers. Canada has taken the first step, and it’s time for other countries to follow suit.

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Golfweek Rewind

Golfweek’s JuliaKate Culpepper discusses the latest news and notes in the world of golf.

Golfweek’s JuliaKate Culpepper discusses the latest news and notes in the world of golf.

2020 Olympics: Latest standings for women’s golf team with games still on

The IOC says the 2020 Olympic Games in Toyko is still on. Here’s the latest ranking for Olympic women’s golf team.

As the golf calendar continues to shake up in major ways, so far, the Summer Olympics in Tokyo are still on. The International Olympic Committee said Tuesday that there’s “no need to make any drastic decisions” at this point regarding the coronavirus. The women’s golf event is slated for Aug. 5-8 at Kasumigaseki Country Club.

If the Olympic teams were fielded off of the current rankings, the most notable name off the list is Inbee Park, who happened to win the last event staged on the LPGA last February in Australia. The 2016 gold-medal winner moved up to No. 11 in the Rolex Rankings and now sits as first alternate behind South Koreans Jin Young Ko, Sung Hyun Park, Sei Young Kim and Eun Jeong Lee6. Neither Ko nor Park have competed in 2020.

The American team would be comprised of Nelly Korda, Danielle Kang and Lexi Thompson. The U.S. needed four players ranked in the top 15 to match the Korean contingent. Jessica Korda, Nelly’s sister, is the first alternate for Team USA. Lizette Salas is the second.

The host country, Japan, would also have three players: Nasa Hataoka, Hinako Shibuno and Ai Suzuki. Both Shibuno and Suzuki won on the LPGA last year but turned down membership to compete on the JLPGA in 2020. Shibuno’s fame exploded last year when she clinched the AIG Women’s British Open in her first LPGA appearance.

Speaking of the WBO, 2018 winner Georgia Hall is currently on the outside looking in for the British team. Charley Hull and Bronte Law now hold the two spots.

The last player in the field of 60 is former Stanford standout Albane Valenzuela, who competed as an amateur in 2016 and tied for 21st. Valenzuela is now a rookie on the LPGA.

The qualification cutoff for the women’s field is June 29, immediately after the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship.

Here’s how the Olympic rankings currently stand:

Rank Name Rolex Rank Country
1 Jin Young Ko 1 KOR
2 Nelly Korda 2 USA
3 Sung Hyun Park 3 KOR
4 Nasa Hataoka 4 JPN
5 Danielle Kang 5 USA
6 Sei Young Kim 6 KOR
7 Brooke M. Henderson 7 CAN
8 Minjee Lee 8 AUS
9 Lexi Thompson 9 USA
10 Jeong Eun Lee6 10 KOR
11 Hinako Shibuno 12 JPN
12 Ai Suzuki 14 JPN
13 Carlota Ciganda 15 ESP
14 Ariya Jutanugarn 17 THA
15 Hannah Green 21 AUS
16 Shanshan Feng 23 CHN
17 Charley Hull 25 GBR
18 Bronte Law 34 GBR
19 Yu Liu 35 CHN
20 Caroline Masson 36 GER
21 Moriya Jutanugarn 37 THA
22 Gaby Lopez 42 MEX
23 Azahara Munoz 44 ESP
24 Celine Boutier 45 FRA
25 Lydia Ko 49 NZL

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International Olympic Committee not yet ready to make ‘drastic’ decision of canceling 2020 Tokyo Gam

The 2020 Olympics — scheduled to start in late July in Tokyo — still hang in the balance due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The 2020 Olympics — scheduled to start in late July in Tokyo — still hang in the balance due to the coronavirus pandemic.