Tokyo Olympics

Juvic Pagunsan exits Tokyo Olympics, Schauffele wins men’s golf gold

Beatrice Go

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Juvic Pagunsan exits Tokyo Olympics, Schauffele wins men’s golf gold

REBOUND. Juvic Pagunsan makes three birdies in his final round of men's golf in the Tokyo Olympics.

Toby Melville/REUTERS

Juvic Pagunsan ends his maiden Olympic stint at 55th as American Xander Schauffele takes home the gold

Filipino golfer Juvic Pagunsan ended his Tokyo 2020 Olympics campaign at solo 55th place in the men’s golf tournament ruled by American Xander Schauffele on Sunday, August 1, at the Kasumigaseki Golf and Country Club.

Pagunsan managed to rebound from his lackluster second- and third-round performances with a one-under par 70 in the final round for a total of one-over par 285.

He birdied the 3rd, 5th and 6th holes, but after settling for 11 straight pars, he bogeyed the last hole.

The Bacolod native, who is the oldest in the Philippine delegation at 43 years old, had a hot start to his Olympic campaign, surging to joint fifth in the opening round.

Schauffele steadied after a late wobble to clinch gold for the United States with a one-stroke victory as South Africa-born Rory Sabbatini claimed an unlikely silver for adopted nation Slovakia.

Taiwan’s CT Pan claimed the bronze, eliminating American Collin Morikawa on the fourth extra hole of a playoff on a scorching day.

“Man, it feels good,” said Schauffele, who claimed the title with a final round 67 for an 18-under total of 266.

“I kind of wanted this one more than any other.

“Everyone is back home watching. I was feeling the love from San Diego and Las Vegas this whole time.”

Overnight leader by a stroke from home favorite Hideki Matsuyama, Schauffele needed to scramble hard through a nervous back nine as his driving went to ruin.

Sabbatini, who took Slovakia citizenship at the end of 2018 after marrying wife Martina, had stormed home with birdies on 17 and 18 in an Olympic record 61 to finish 17-under and put pressure on Schauffele.

The 27-year-old American stumbled with a bogey on the 14th to fall back to a share of the gold medal position with Sabbatini, who was waiting nervously in the clubhouse.

It took an eight-foot birdie putt on the 17th for Schauffele to break clear by a stroke but more nerves were to come as he slashed his drive into the deep rough on 18.

Hitting his recovery into the fairway, Schauffele composed himself before producing a sparkling iron shot that landed four feet from the pin, allowing him to knock in the title-winning par.

Schauffele brought his swing coach father Stefan to the Games, nearly 40 years after the former decathlete’s dreams of representing Germany at the Olympics were crushed when a car crash left him blind in one eye.

“For me, I really wanted to win for my dad. I am sure he is crying somewhere right now,” said Schauffele.

He had earlier had one hand on the gold medal after a flying start with four birdies in his first eight holes.

But Sabbatini came from nowhere, holing 10 birdies and an eagle on the par-four sixth as his caddie-wife shrieked in celebration.

The strain finally told on Schauffele as he sliced his tee-shot into the trees on the right of the par-five 14th, forcing a penalty drop.

He recovered well to limit the damage to a bogey and hung tight for the title as his playing partner Matsuyama fell away.  – with reports from Reuters/Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!
Clothing, Apparel, Person

author

Beatrice Go

More commonly known as Bee, Beatrice Go is a multimedia sports reporter for Rappler, who covers Philippine sports governance, national teams, football, and the UAAP. Stay tuned for her news and features on Philippine sports and videos like the Rappler Athlete’s Corner and Rappler Sports Timeout.