Women's golf
at the Games of the XXXII Olympiad
Golf course at Kasumigaseki Country Club
VenueKasumigaseki Country Club
Dates4–7 August 2021
Competitors60 from 35 nations
Winning score267 (−17)
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Nelly Korda  United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Mone Inami  Japan
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Lydia Ko  New Zealand

The women's individual golf event at the 2020 Summer Olympics took place from 4 to 7 August 2021 at the Kasumigaseki Country Club.[1] 60 golfers from 35 nations competed. Nelly Korda of the United States took gold, Mone Inami of Japan and Lydia Ko of New Zealand tied for second with Inami taking the silver in a sudden-death playoff.[2]

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 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 program until returning in 2016.[3]

Qualification

Each nation can qualify from one to four golfers based on the World Rankings of 28 June 2021. The top 60 golfers, subject to limits per nation and guarantees for the host and continental representation, are selected. A nation can have three or four golfers if they are all in the top 15 of the rankings; otherwise, each nation is limited to two golfers. One spot is guaranteed for the host nation and five spots are guaranteed to ensure that each Olympic continent has at least one representative.

Competition format

Following the format used when golf was returned to the Olympic programme in 2016, the tournament is a four-round stroke play tournament, with the lowest score over the total 72 holes winning.

Schedule

As with most major stroke play tournaments, the event is held over four days (Wednesday through Saturday) with each golfer playing one round (18 holes) per day.[1]

All times are Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)

Date Time Round
Wednesday, 4 August 20217:30First round
Thursday, 5 August 20217:30Second round
Friday, 6 August 20217:30Third round
Saturday, 7 August 20216:30Final round

Results

First round

Wednesday, 4 August 2021

Madelene Sagström of Sweden shot a 5-under-par 66 to take a one-stroke lead over Aditi Ashok of India and world number one Nelly Korda of the United States. Inbee Park, 2016 gold medalist, was three shots off the lead at 69. The heat index was over 100 °F (38 °C), approaching dangerous levels.[4]

RankPlayerNationScoreTo par
1Madelene Sagström Sweden66−5
T2Aditi Ashok India67−4
Nelly Korda United States
T4Matilda Castren Finland68−3
Carlota Ciganda Spain
Ko Jin-young South Korea
T7Hsu Wei-ling Chinese Taipei69−2
Danielle Kang United States
Kim Sei-young South Korea
Min Lee Chinese Taipei
Nanna Koerstz Madsen Denmark
Azahara Muñoz Spain
Bianca Pagdanganan Philippines
Inbee Park South Korea
Klára Spilková Czech Republic

Second round

Thursday, 5 August 2021

Nelly Korda took a four stroke lead after a second round of 62. Korda was 11-under-par after 17 holes but had a double-bogey at the final hole. Aditi Ashok, Nanna Koerstz Madsen and Emily Kristine Pedersen were tied for second place, with first round leader Madelene Sagström a further stroke behind, in fifth place.[5]

RankPlayerNationScoreTo par
1Nelly Korda United States67-62=129−13
T2Aditi Ashok India67-66=133−9
Nanna Koerstz Madsen Denmark69-64=133
Emily Kristine Pedersen Denmark70-63=133
5Madelene Sagström Sweden66-68=134−8
T6Mone Inami Japan70-65=135−7
Ko Jin-young South Korea68-67=135
8Hannah Green Australia71-65=136−6
T9Lydia Ko New Zealand70-67=137−5
Lin Xiyu China71-66=137

Third round

Friday, 6 August 2021

Nelly Korda had a third round of 69 to lead by three strokes from Aditi Ashok, who birdied two of the last four holes. Four players, Hannah Green, Mone Inami, Lydia Ko and Emily Kristine Pedersen, were tied for third place, five behind Korda.[6]

RankPlayerNationScoreTo par
1Nelly Korda United States67-62-69=198−15
2Aditi Ashok India67-66-68=201−12
T3Hannah Green Australia71-65-67=203−10
Mone Inami Japan70-65-68=203
Lydia Ko New Zealand70-67-66=203
Emily Kristine Pedersen Denmark70-63-70=203
T7Nasa Hataoka Japan70-68-67=205−8
Nanna Koerstz Madsen Denmark69-64-72=205
Madelene Sagström Sweden66-68-71=205
T10Matilda Castren Finland68-70-68=206−7
Shanshan Feng China74-64-68=206
Kim Sei-young South Korea69-69-68=206
Ko Jin-young South Korea68-67-71=206
Lin Xiyu China71-66-69=206
Stephanie Meadow Ireland72-66-68=206

Final round

Saturday, 7 August 2021

Mone Inami beat Lydia Ko in a sudden-death playoff for the silver medal.[2]

RankPlayerNationRd 1Rd 2Rd 3Rd 4TotalTo par
1st place, gold medalist(s)Nelly Korda United States67626969267−17
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Mone Inami Japan70656865268−16
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Lydia Ko New Zealand70676665
4Aditi Ashok India67666868269−15
T5Hannah Green Australia71656768271−13
Emily Kristine Pedersen Denmark70637068
7Stephanie Meadow Ireland72666866272−12
8Shanshan Feng China74646867273−11
T9Nasa Hataoka Japan70686769274−10
Kim Sei-young South Korea69696868
Ko Jin-young South Korea68677168
Lin Xiyu China71666968
Nanna Koerstz Madsen Denmark69647269
Yuka Saso Philippines74686765
T15Hsu Wei-ling Chinese Taipei69697166275−9
Kim Hyo-joo South Korea70687067
Jessica Korda United States71677364
T18Matilda Castren Finland68706870276−8
Albane Valenzuela Switzerland71696769
T20Danielle Kang United States69697465277−7
Sanna Nuutinen Finland70686970
Madelene Sagström Sweden66687172
T23María Fassi Mexico73706868279−5
Leona Maguire Ireland71677071
Anna Nordqvist Sweden72696870
Inbee Park South Korea69707169
Klára Spilková Czech Republic69707169
Patty Tavatanakit Thailand71716968
T29Carlota Ciganda Spain68737069280−4
Perrine Delacour France70706971
Brooke Henderson Canada74687167
Minjee Lee Australia71687368
33Lexi Thompson United States72716969281−3
T34Pia Babnik Slovenia71717367282−2
Céline Boutier France73687269
Min Lee Chinese Taipei69697272
Kelly Tan Malaysia73737264
T38Daniela Darquea Ecuador72736573283−1
Gaby López Mexico71726971
T40Caroline Masson Germany71706875284E
Sophia Popov Germany71727071
Jodi Ewart Shadoff Great Britain74687072
T43Maha Haddioui Morocco72747069285+1
Ariya Jutanugarn Thailand77676972
Bianca Pagdanganan Philippines69717174
T46Manon De Roey Belgium71677474286+2
Giulia Molinaro Italy75717070
48Maria Torres Puerto Rico73777067287+3
49Alena Sharp Canada74716975289+5
T50Tiffany Chan Hong Kong77746970290+6
Diksha Dagar India76727270
Azahara Muñoz Spain69767372
Mariajo Uribe Colombia73777070
54Kim Métraux Switzerland74707473291+7
55Mel Reid Great Britain73757668292+8
56Christine Wolf Austria71728173297+13
57Anne van Dam Netherlands74786977298+14
58Magdalena Simmermacher Argentina76707876300+16
59Lucrezia Colombotto Rosso Italy75747578302+18
60Tonje Daffinrud Norway81738174309+25

The medals for the competition were presented by Odette Assembe-Engoulou, Cameroon; IOC Member, and the medalists' bouquets were presented by Annika Sörenstam, Sweden; IGF President.

References

  1. 1 2 "Golf Competition Schedule". Tokyo 2020. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  2. 1 2 "Tokyo Olympics: USA's Nelly Korda wins gold on dramatic final day of golf competition". BBC Sport. 7 August 2021.
  3. "Individual, Men (2016)". Olympedia. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  4. "Madelene Sagstrom holds one-shot lead after Olympic women's golf tournament opens amid searing heat". ESPN. Associated Press. 4 August 2021.
  5. "Tokyo Olympics: Nelly Korda shoots a superb nine-under 62 to take a four-stroke lead in the women's Olympic golf". BBC Sport. 5 August 2021.
  6. "Tokyo Olympics: Nelly Korda's lead cut to three by Aditi Ashok". BBC Sport. 6 August 2021.
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