Fuelled by pride and heritage Xander Schauffele rediscovers winning touch at the Olympics
The American claimed gold after Slovakia’s Rory Sabbatini threatened to pull off a shock and before CT Pan emerged from a seven-man bronze medal playoff.
Instead, long-time leader Xander Schauffele held his nerve to make par at the last, clinch the gold medal, and foil the best efforts of Rory Sabbatini, whose consolation was silver.
A dramatic finish. This is what the #Olympics is about.
— Olympic Golf (@OlympicGolf) August 1, 2021
🥇 Xander Schauffele #USA
🥈 Rory Sabbatini #SVK
🥉 C.T. Pan #TPE #Olympics #Golf #Tokyo2020 pic.twitter.com/j6PNojkQZP
Pressure
He had started the final day with the lead, maintained it with four front nine birdies, was set a stiff clubhouse target when Sabbatini signed for a scintillating 61, made a terrible mess of the 14th hole, then finally held his nerve to card a 67 for a winning total of 18-under 266.
This medal is for my country and my family, especially my dad!🥇🇺🇸
— Xander Schauffele (@XSchauffele) August 1, 2021
Proud and honored to bring the gold back to the USA! #Olympics #Tokyo2020 pic.twitter.com/w2gMIWqur3
"I maybe put more pressure on myself want to win this," he admitted.
If he appeared a little dazed in the immediate aftermath of his win, it was no illusion because the combination of Sabbatini's brilliance and his own errors had placed him under considerable pressure.
"Just in shock and very relieved," he sighed. "Hit a terrible drive on 18, had to make a sort of sloppy par. But, man, it was stressful. Making that putt was just a huge weight lifted off my shoulders."
Nearly man
One hole away from Gold 🥇@XSchauffele leads by one as they play the final hole of regulation play.#TheOlympics pic.twitter.com/mNuFxLyoY6
— The European Tour (@EuropeanTour) August 1, 2021
He was also knew that he started the day 0-for-5 at converting 54 hole lead into victories.
Embrace
A special moment for the Schauffele family.
— GOLFTV (@GOLFTV) August 1, 2021
Xander's mother was brought up in Japan and his grandparents live there now. His dad was part of the German decathlon squad before his Olympic dream was ended in a car accident. pic.twitter.com/4NF8Fz19Lz
The champion was hoping to see his grandparents, but he expected not to - that it would be safer to Facetime them instead.
But the Schauffele family's cosmopolitan connections were not yet done.
Paul Casey and Hideki Matsuyama fell at the first extra hole; Mito Pereira, Sebastian Munoz and Rory McIlroy fell at the third; and Collin Morikawa lost at the fourth.