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Rory McIlroy dealt another blow to golf's relationship with the Olympics on Tuesday as he indicated that he would only watch "the stuff that matters" at next month's Games.
The final 60-man list of players to go to Rio de Janeiro was revealed on Monday, with world number three Jordan Spieth joining the likes of McIlroy, Jason Day, Dustin Johnson and Adam Scott in opting out.
Fears over the Zika virus have been cited by a number of top players for pulling out, despite such concerns not appearing to trouble athletes in other sports, or indeed the world's leading female golfers.
But McIlroy has also admitted that the Olympics just don't have the same meaning to golfers as other athletes, a point he hammered home as he spoke at Royal Troon in Scotland, where this week's British Open will be held.
"I'll probably watch the Olympics, but I'm not sure golf will be one of the events I watch," said the 27-year-old, who withdrew from the Games last month.
When asked what he would turn his television on for during the Games, McIlroy added: "Probably the events like track and field, swimming, diving, the stuff that matters."
The sport has been brought back into the Olympic fold for the first time since the 1904 Games in St Louis, and International Golf Federation chief Peter Dawson had voiced his hope that the new exposure given by the Olympics would help further grow the game.
But McIlroy sees things differently.
"I didn't get into golf to try and grow the game," said the Northern Irishman, a four-time major winner.
"I got into golf to win championships and win major championships."
The build-up to this week's Open on Scotland's west coast has to some extent been overshadowed by the Olympic debacle.
Spieth spent most of his time in front of the media explaining why he made a last-minute call to withdraw on Monday, just ahead of the deadline.
But the Texan prodigy, who won the Masters and the US Open last year, indicated that pulling out of Rio was the "hardest decision" he has ever made and said going to the next Olympics in Tokyo in 2020 remains a "significant goal".
"Listen, this was probably the hardest decision I've ever had to make in my life at 22 years old. I can probably honestly say that," Spieth said.
"This was harder than trying to decide what university to go to, whether to turn professional and leave school. This was something I very much struggled with.
"I'm very passionate and very much a supporter of the Olympics and Olympic golf. I do hope to play in four or five, you name it, Olympics representing the United States in the future, if I have the opportunity."
That raises the question as to why Spieth chose so late on not to go to Rio, all the more so as he denied that his withdrawal was specifically for fears of catching the mosquito-borne Zika disease. He also refused to confirm what medical advice he had been given to help him reach such a decision.
"No, that's personal. I can't. I can tell you that I'm not specifically pinpointing any one thing in my health concerns either," he said. "This is health concerns as a whole."

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2016

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