Golf's gender divide over Rio, and Zika
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[June 29, 2016]
By Mark Lamport-Stokes
(Reuters) - When it comes to golfers
and their interest in competing at this year's Olympic Games in Rio
de Janeiro, a curious gender divide is emerging which, at first
glance, is counter-intuitive.
While world number one Jason Day and fourth-ranked Rory McIlroy
are among several big names in the men's game who have already opted
out of Rio, not a single women's player has yet withdrawn from
global sport's showpiece.
Both Day and McIlroy have cited Zika fears as their prime reason for
pulling out, saying they were unwilling to put either themselves or
their families at risk from a mosquito-borne virus that can cause
crippling birth defects.
Yet even though pregnant women appear to be most vulnerable to the
virus, Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) players have
enthusiastically embraced golf's return to the Olympics after an
absence of more than a century.
According to a recent Sports Illustrated survey, 40 percent of LPGA
Tour players said they would prefer to win a gold medal in Rio than
any of this year's four major golf championships.
In contrast, 29 percent of PGA Tour players expressed a preference
for winning gold over the season's final major, the PGA
Championship, and that percentage would likely have been lower if
the Masters, U.S. Open and British Open had factored in.
Surprisingly, 62 percent of PGA Tour players rated the Players
Championship, which is not a major, above Olympic success.
Based on that and other evidence collected so far, women players
seem to have placed a higher priority on Olympic golf than a
majority of their male counterparts.
American Matt Kuchar, a seven-times winner on the PGA Tour who is
ranked 17th in the world, summed up the ambivalence of his peers
over golf's return to the Olympics.
"For the fact that this is going to be the first time in over a
hundred years for golf to be played at the Olympics, we will
certainly be awfully excited," Kuchar told Reuters.
"But would you rather win one of the majors or an Olympic medal? I
don't know exactly. Most of the Olympic sports have their 'big
event' once every four years with the World Cups and world
championships that go on.
"In the golf world, we have our four majors ... then every other
week there is a big event going on with major attention. The fact
that we have an event every week, the Olympics will be another
event."
OLYMPIC THRILL TRUMPS ZIKA FEARS
For Lydia Ko, the top-ranked women's golfer, the thrill of being
part of the Olympics trumps any fear over Zika.
"I'm more excited about the Olympics, about the ceremony, about just
being in that Olympic vibe than worrying about the Zika virus," said
the 19-year-old New Zealander.
"It's more important that we enjoy Rio and we're excited about it.
And all the girls I've talked to, that's kind of the response. We're
all excited to go to Brazil, represent our countries and be there
amongst the other Olympians.
"It's unfortunate with what's happening with Zika. We all trust the
people that are taking care of it ... it's in their hands now."
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Brazil's Miriam Nagl hits the ball. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes
U.S. health officials have concluded that Zika infections in
pregnant women can cause microcephaly, a birth defect marked by
small head size that can lead to severe developmental problems in
babies.
The World Health Organisation has said there is strong scientific
consensus that Zika can also cause Guillain-Barre, a rare
neurological syndrome that causes temporary paralysis in adults.
For women golfers, national pride and greater recognition on a
global stage appear to be driving forces as they prepare for the Rio
Summer Games. With the men, however, Olympic motivation does not
seem to be anywhere near as high.
And yet as the list of notable men's absentees from Rio is steadily
lengthening, several leading PGA Tour players are excited by the
prospect of being at the Olympics for the Aug. 11-14 men's golf
competition.
American world number two Jordan Spieth anticipates an "awesome"
experience while fifth-ranked Swede Henrik Stenson told Reuters: "I
see it as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be part of the
Olympics. It's a cool event."
A significant difference between men and women as the Rio clock
ticks down relates to their respective 2016 schedules for the
biggest golf events.
On the PGA Tour, the last three majors have been crammed into a
hectic seven-week span from mid-June until late-July because of the
Olympic Games, a prime reason for Australia's 2013 Masters champion
Adam Scott saying no to Rio.
In contrast, the women's majors have been generously spread out with
the first in April, another earlier this month, two more in July and
the final one of the season to be held in mid-September.
"It seemed right to take a break (around the Olympics) for the
players," said LPGA Commissioner Mike Whan. "It's an exciting time
for us. I have yet to meet somebody in player dining who wasn't
trying to figure out if they were going to make it on their
country's team in Rio."
(Editing by Frank Pingue)
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