Xander Schauffele became the first American to win the gold, while Indian golfer Anirban Lahiri ended his second Olympic campaign at Tied 42nd after carding a one-over 72 in the fourth and final round in Tokyo on Sunday. Tokyo Olympics | Full Schedule | Sports News
Lahiri, who began the week with a superb 67 and was inside Top-10, slid down the ladder thereafter with rounds of 72-68-72 over the next three days for a total of 5-under 283. He had finished at 57th spot in 2016 Rio Olympics.
The other Indian in fray, Udayan Mane, who got into the field later as a result of some withdrawals, also shot one-over 72 in the final round after earlier rounds of 76-69-70. He was 3-over for the week and ended 56th.
Lahiri started the week with a bogey on the first day but ended it with a birdie.
On the final day, he had three birdies and four bogeys.
Mane had four birdies, one on the front nine and three on the back nine, besides five bogeys.
Schauffele (68-63-68-67) became the first American to win the gold, while South African-born Slovakian Rory Sabbatini (69-67-70-61), with his wife Martina Stofanikova on the bag, won the silver with a record-breaking 10-under 61.
CT Pan (74-66-66-63), also with his wife Michelle Lin as caddie, won the bronze in a seven-man play-off.
For more than an hour after gold and silver had been decided, the fight for bronze went on with a seven-man play-off that brought out the beauty of golf at the Olympics.
The seven included four-time Major winner, Rory McIlroy, two-time Major winner, Collin Morikawa, who has Japanese links, and home star and Masters champion, Hideki Matsuyama.
Add to them Sebastian Munoz of Colombia, Mito Perera of Chile, Paul Casey of Great Britain and CT Pan of Chinese Taipei, and it underlined the global appeal of golf.
From that lot, Pan won the bronze, seven years after he won two Asian Games gold medals in golf in 2014.
Schauffele, 27, playing in front of what was one of the largest crowds attending an Olympic win this year, claimed the gold in a country, where his grandparents from his mother's side still reside.
Xander sunk a 4-foot par putt for a 4-under 67 for his first tournament victory in two and a half years after several close calls.
His father and coach, Stefan Schauffele was once a Olympic decathlon hopeful till a drunk driver hit him and left him blind in one eye in 1986. The elder Schauffele was then 20.
Xander Schauffele became the first American golfer to win gold since 1900 and it was not contested from 1908 to 2012.