Jon Rahm says goodbye to an Olympic medal he’s already touched with his fingertips Due to a terrible finish on the fourth day of the Paris Games. The Barrica player finished fourth, three years after being ruled out of Tokyo 2020. A big ‘stick’ from which he barely needed a week and a half to recover.
At Le Golf National, the Barrica player was already thinking about the color of the metal that would be hung after the 10th hole, but The ‘Via Crucis’ started with a ‘bogey’ on 11, another on 12 After sending the ball into the sand, he failed to save the par 5 14th and also made a putt for bogey at two over par, ending his options. He eventually went medalless.
“I don’t know when was the last time I thought fifth place was good, but this time it definitely wasn’t. It’s sad. I played so well, and in the end I didn’t have a chance for anything… (sigh). Paris.

Rather than going into a loop, he has largely managed to overcome it He had a great second half of Day 2 this Saturday at LIV Golf Greenbrier which is disputed in the American city of White Sulphur Springs (West Virginia). The best Spanish golfer of the moment started the fourth day with -6 and closed the first nine holes with birdies on 1 and 5, which he wasted with four strokes on the par 3 of hole number 8.

Rahm faces Sunday with all the options /AP
There they found their magic No bogeys on the final nine holes to give him -7 Of the day. Basque made birdie on 10 and added three between 12 and 14. The last two were spectacular, an eagle on the par 5 of 17 and one under par on the last, which he completed with only two impacts.
Jon Rahm leads at -14 at the end of SundayThe competition is very strong though and there are a quartet of golfers within two strokes of any indecision waiting to take first place in this Sunday’s 18 holes that will determine the champion (the LIV is played over 54 holes and not 72 holes like a traditional tournament).

The chasing quartet is made up of Americans Brooks Koepka (2023 PGA winner) And Talor Gooch (he won LIV Golf Singapore last year by beating Sergio Garcia of Castellon on the first hole of a playoff), British Richard Bland, 51 years old (he won the US Senior Open this year) and Australian Lucas Herbert, with one win on the PGA Tour and three on the European Tour. It won’t be easy.