50 DAYS TO GO: WOMEN’S GOLF AT THE 2024 OLYMPICS

We are now just 50 days out from women’s golf taking swing at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games where a plethora of Ladies European Tour (LET) stars will take to grandest sporting stage of all.

For any athlete, nothing evokes more honour than representing your country and this year sixty female competitors from around the globe will tee up at Le Golf National in Paris, France for the 72-hole stroke play individual event between 7-10 August 2024.

The prestigious course on the outskirts of Paris previously staged the 2018 Ryder Cup and has been used for almost 30 editions of the French Open on the DP World Tour.

The Paris Games mark the third consecutive staging of golf at the Olympics after the long-awaited competition returned in 2016 for the Rio Games followed by the Tokyo Games five years later.

USA’s Nelly Korda will be defending her Olympic crown after adding a gold medal to her already impressive resume at Kasumigaseki Country Club last time out. New Zealand’s Lydia Ko will also be gunning for gold as she looks to complete the treasured triad having picked up silver in Rio and bronze in Tokyo.

As for LET stars past and present, all our Olympians continue to recognise playing at the Games as one of the biggest accomplishments and highlights of their careers, and this year should be no different as a host of players battle it out to earn one of the coveted spots.

Leading the way will be the likes of Celine Boutier (France), Charley Hull (Team GB), Georgia Hall (Team GB), Linn Grant (Sweden), Leona Maguire (Ireland), Aditi Ashok (India) and Carlota Ciganda (Spain). While rising stars such as Alexandra Försterling (Germany), Alessandra Fanali (Italy), Shannon Tan (Singapore) and Sara Kouskova (Czech Republic) will also be hoping to fulfil lifelong dreams and debut in the Games.

Fanali, now into her second year on the LET, said: “I feel like the Olympics is the goal of every single athlete. At least, that’s how I see it because I have grown up watching it every four years. I actually took a class in college about the history of the Olympics! The whole story behind it is special. So for me, it would mean so much to get to play. It’s a lifetime goal and probably the best memory you can have in your life.”

Eligibility to compete in the Games will be determined by the Olympic Golf Rankings, which are calculated using a player’s position in the Rolex Women’s World Golf Rankings as of June 24. The top 15 players in the Rolex Rankings will qualify for the Olympic Games, with a four-person limit for each country represented in the top 15.

From number 16 onwards eligibility will be based on Rolex Ranking. Each country that does not already have two or more players ranked inside the top 15 will have a two-person limit.

A total of 60 players will tee it up in the women’s golf competition with the host country France guaranteed one of those 60 spots. Just like she so wonderful did at The Amundi Evian Championship last summer, Boutier will again be carrying her nations hopes of a prestigious medal firmly on her star-studded shoulders.

Players in both the men’s and women’s events – the former taking place a week prior between 1-4 August – will play a 72-hole stroke play competition across four days, with gold, silver and bronze medals for each of the top three finishers. There is no cut and in the event of a tie for any of the medals, a sudden death playoff will take place to determine the medallists.

Here’s a look at the Olympic Golf Rankings following the Volvo Car Scandinavian Mixed as of 10 June 2024 (LET members are listed in bold):

  1. Nelly Korda – USA
  2. Lilia Vu – USA
  3. Céline Boutier – France
  4. Ruoning Yin – China
  5. Hannah Green – Australia
  6. Yuka Saso – Japan
  7. Jin-Young Ko – Republic of Korea
  8. Rose Zhang – USA
  9. Charley Hull – Team GB
  10. Minjee Lee – Australia
  11. Hyo-Joo Kim – Republic of Korea
  12. Atthaya Thitikul – Thailand
  13. Lin Xiyu – China
  14. Brooke Henderson – Canada
  15. Lydia Ko – New Zealand
  16. Maja Stark – Sweden
  17. Ayaka Furue – Japan
  18. Patty Tavatanakit – Thailand
  19. Carlota Ciganda – Spain
  20. Leona Maguire – Ireland
  21. Linn Grant – Sweden
  22. Georgia Hall – Team GB
  23. Ashleigh Buhai – South Africa
  24. Alexandra Försterling – Germany
  25. Aditi Ashok – India
  26. Gaby López – Mexico
  27. Esther Henseleit – Germany
  28. Albane Valenzuela – Switzerland
  29. Emily Kristine Pedersen – Denmark
  30. Perrine Delacour – France
  31. Pei-Yun Chien – Chinese Taipei
  32. Anne van Dam – Netherlands
  33. Azahara Muñoz – Spain
  34. Nanna Koerstz Madsen – Denmark
  35. Bianca Pagdanganan – Philippines
  36. Stephanie Meadow – Ireland
  37. Diksha Dagar – India
  38. Morgane Metraux – Switzerland
  39. Manon De Roey – Belgium
  40. Celine Borge – Norway
  41. Klara Davidson Spilkova – Czech Republic
  42. Wei Ling Hsu – Chinese Taipei
  43. Mariajo Uribe – Colombia
  44. María Fassi – Mexico
  45. Emma Spitz – Austria
  46. Shannon Tan – Singapore
  47. Paula Reto – South Africa
  48. Alessandra Fanali – Italy
  49. Ashley Lau – Malaysia
  50. Sara Kouskova – Czech Republic
  51. Alena Sharp – Canada
  52. Ana Belac – Slovenia
  53. Madelene Stavnar – Norway
  54. Momoka Kobori – New Zealand
  55. Dottie Ardina – Phillipines
  56. Dewi Weber – Netherlands
  57. Sarah Schober – Austria
  58. Ines Laklalech – Morocco
  59. Ursula Wikström – Finland
  60. Noora Komulainen – Finland

    For more information about women’s golf at the Olympic Games, visit the International Golf Federation (IGF) and the Paris 2024 websites.