from wiki...
On October 9, 2009 the IOC voted to include rugby sevens and golf on the program for the Games in Rio. The other 26 sports were also confirmed with a large majority of the votes.[7] International Golf Federation executive director Antony Scanlon told Olympic news outlet Around the Rings that the top players, including Tiger Woods and Annika Sörenstam, would show their continued support of golf's Olympic involvement by participating in the events.
In August 2011, President of the 2016 Olympic Committee, Carlos Nuzman, backed Sepp Blatter's request for including beach soccer in the 2016 games.[8][9]
i guess anika is a lock...
in perspective from The Olympics of 1900.. held in Paris
The men played two rounds (36 holes), summing the scores. The entire competition was held on 2 October.
Place/Name/Round 1/Round 2/Total
1/Charles Sands (USA)/82/85/167
2/Walter Rutherford (GBR)/Unknown/168
3/David Robertson (GBR)/Unknown/175
4/Frederick Taylor (USA)/Unknown/182
Interestingly...
Margaret Ives Abbott (June 15, 1876 – June 10, 1955) was the first American woman to take first place in an Olympic event; she won the women's golf tournament, consisting of nine holes, with a score of 47 at the 1900 Paris games. These games were apparently so poorly organized that many competitors, including Abbott, did not realize that the events they entered were part of the Olympics. Historical research did not establish that the game was on the Olympic program until after her death, so she herself never knew it.[1] Abbott had traveled to Paris to study art under Edgar Degas and Auguste Rodin. Her mother, Mary Perkins Ives Abbot (a novelist and Chicago Tribune book reviewer), also competed in the event, finishing tied for seventh, making it the first (and still only) Olympic event in which a mother and daughter competed at the same time.[2]
Born in Calcutta, India in 1876, in 1902, Abbott married writer Finley Peter Dunne.
References
1.^ Ralph Hickok (2004). "Abbott, Margaret I., Golf". HickokSports. Retrieved 2008-08-12.
2.^ Lester, John (July 9, 1996). "Recognizing First U.S. Women's Champion is a Step in the Right Direction".