Joost Luiten won the battle in a Dutch court to play in the Olympics. That wasn't enough for the International Olympic Committee, which on Tuesday denied a request to add him to the field for men's golf at the Paris Games.
Antony Scanlan, executive director of the International Golf Federation, said Tuesday afternoon the Dutch court ruling only directed its Olympic committee to put Luiten in the Olympics.
''When they entered him, we already had moved forward with the process,'' Scanlan said, meaning the IGF submitted the list of golfers with the two alternates for the Dutch players. "What I had to do then was write to the IOC and ask for an exemption on the 60-player limit and allow 61 players.''
He said the IOC, which is not under jurisdiction of Dutch courts, did not feel compelled to add another player to the field.
Luiten directed his anger at the IOC in an Instagram post late Tuesday evening, saying he could not take the Olympics seriously anymore.
''They don't take the Dutch law as (their) jurisdiction and my spot in The Olympics had already been given away to somebody else because the @NOCNSF withdrew me early! Now they don't want to give me my spot back!!!'' Luiten wrote.
''I don't see any fair play or respect from the IOC, so how can they say The Olympic games are built on those fundamentals?''
The Dutch Olympic Committee decided not to send Luiten and Darius Van Driel, and Dewi Weber for the women's competition, to the Paris Games because they felt their world rankings were too low for them to have a reasonable chance against 60-player fields.