The International Golf Federation (IGF) today announced the entry lists for the men's and women's golf events at the 2024 Paris Olympics. The men's Olympic golf competition will be held from August 1-4 and the women's competition from August 7-10. The Olympic golf competition will be held at the Golf National de Paris, which annually hosts the FedEx French Open on the DP World Tour and was also the site of the 2018 Ryder Cup.
Once the Olympic Golf Rankings for the men's and women's Olympic Golf events are finalized on June 18 and June 25, National Olympic Committees (NOCs) will begin confirming their eligibility for the event by June 27 (5 p.m. ET). After this deadline, any unused quota will be reallocated according to the golf qualification system.
With 32 nations competing in the men’s and 33 in the women’s event, the Olympic field highlights the broad global interest in golf and the opportunity for the sport to reach new audiences from six continents. Golf is expected to build on the success of Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020. Paris 2024 will mark the fifth time golf has been an Olympic sport and the third time since 1904.
A total of 38 different NOCs will be represented in both men's and women's Olympic golf, with the United States sending the most athletes: 7 (4 men, 3 women). Here is the full list of NOCs participating in both men's and women's Olympic golf: Australia, Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Chile, China, Chinese Taipei, Colombia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Paraguay, Philippines, Poland, Puerto Rico, South Korea, Singapore, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, United States.
On the men's side, 10 of the top 15 players in the Official World Golf Ranking as of this week (including all top 5 players) will play Olympic golf. On the women's side, all 15 of the top 15 women in the Rolex Ranking as of this week will play Olympic golf.
Olympic men's golf venue
Alphabetical order by National Olympic Committee
Name – National Olympic Committee
Emiliano Grillo – Argentina
Alejandro Tosti – Argentina
Jason Day – Australia
Min Woo Lee – Australia
Sepp Straka – Austria
Thomas Detry – Belgium
Adrien Dumont de Chassat – Belgium
Nick Taylor – Canada
Corey Conners-Canada
Joaquin Niemann, Chile
Myth Pereira – Chile
Zecheng Dou – China
Carl Yuan – China
Kevin Yu – Chinese Taipei
CT Pan – Chinese Taipei
Camilo Villegas – Colombia
Nico Echavarria – Colombia
Nicolai Højgaard – Denmark
Thorbjørn Olesen – Denmark
Sami Valimaki – Finland
Tapio Pulkkanen – Finland
Mathieu Pavon – France
Victor Perez – France
Stephan Jaeger – Germany
Matti Schmid, Germany
Tommy Fleetwood – United Kingdom
Matthew Fitzpatrick – United Kingdom
Shubhankar Sharma – India
Gaganjit Brar – India
Rory McIlroy – Ireland
Shane Lowry – Ireland
Matteo Manassero – Italy
Guido Migliozzi – Italy
Hideki Matsuyama – Japan
Keita Nakajima – Japan
Gavin Green – Malaysia
Abraham Anser – Mexico
Carlos Ortiz – Mexico
Ryan Fox, New Zealand
Daniel Hillier – New Zealand
Viktor Hovland – Norway
Kris Ventura – Norway
Fabrizio Zanotti – Paraguay
Adrian Meronk – Poland
Rafael Campos – Puerto Rico
Tom Kim – South Korea
Byeong Hun An – South Korea
Christiaan Bezuidenhout – South Africa
Erik van Rooyen – South Africa
Jon Rahm – Spain
David Puig – Spain
Ludvig Åberg – Sweden
Alex Noren – Sweden
Joel Girrbach, Switzerland
Kiradech Aphibarnrat – Thailand
Phachara Khongwatmai – Thailand
Scottie Scheffler – United States
Xander Schauffele – United States
Wyndham Clark Hotel – United States
Collin Morikawa – United States