Woods gives thumbs-up to competing at the Olympics

CHASKA, Minnesota, (Reuters) – Tiger Woods said yesterday he would compete at the 2016 Olympics if golf was added  to the Games programme after an absence of more than a 100  years.

Golf is vying with rugby, squash, karate, roller sports,  baseball and softball and the International Olympic Committee  (IOC) will announce a shortlist of two sports on Thursday.

In two months’ time a final vote will decide whether those  two sports will be part of the Games programme.

“If I’m not retired by then, yeah,” Woods, 33, told  reporters with a broad grin while preparing for this week’s U.S.  PGA Championship at Hazeltine National.
Again asked if he would compete at the Olympics in 2016 when  he would be 40, the American world number one replied: “Yep.”

Woods, a 14-times major winner and arguably the greatest  player of all time, has been actively involved in golf’s push  for a return to the Olympics.

In April, he wrote personally to the IOC member for the  United States in support of the International Golf Federation’s  bid.

“Golf is a truly global sport and it should have been in the  Olympics a while ago,” Woods said. “If it does get in, I think  it would be great for golf, and especially (for) some of the  other smaller countries that are now emerging in golf.

GOLFING EXPOSURE
“It’s a great way for them to compete and play and get the  exposure that some of these countries aren’t getting.”

Three-times major winner Padraig Harrington, the defending  champion at Hazeltine this week, also expressed enthusiasm for  golf’s Olympic bid.

“I’d love to be an Olympian,” the Irishman said. “Doesn’t  that sound good? Imagine us being Olympic athletes. I think it  would be fantastic for golf.”

Harrington felt golf’s renowned etiquette and innate sense  of fair play made it a natural choice as an Olympic sport.

“As a golfer, I would think we have all the credentials to  be Olympians,” he said. “Most of the time, we don’t have  referees out there. We are playing away on our own.

“It seems like golf was always destined to be an Olympic  sport. I’m sure there are a lot of athletes out there who would  never put golf (down) as a sport, but try to explain that to  somebody who doesn’t play golf.

“They will never understand what goes into golf. Most  golfers realise what goes into it and will see it as being a  natural sport for the Olympics.”

Golf, which first featured as an Olympic sport in Paris in  1900 and most recently in St Louis in 1904, failed in its latest  bid for inclusion at the 2012 Games.