Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry are in Paris for a few weeks to compete and represent Ireland in the 2024 Olympics. Before their competition officially begins, they took a trip to Le Golf National, the venue at which Olympic golf will take place, for a photoshoot with the iconic set of rings.The duo climbed up onto the platform and took their place within one ring each, with Rory McIlroy standing in the blue ring and Lowry on the other side in the red ring. They smiled before moving inward to join one another inside the black middle ring for another photo.Then they each had a solo photo taken inside the black ring as well. McIlroy thanked the photographer before hopping back down to the ground and jogging away. (Video via OlympicGolf on X):McIlroy had the choice to represent Ireland or Great Britain since he is from Northern Ireland, but he decided in 2021 that he was going to represent Ireland alongside Lowry and he stuck to that decision in 2024.Can Shane Lowry or Rory McIlroy win the Olympics?Winning a medal is a huge honor at the Olympics. For golf, only three of the 60 players will come home with any sort of accolade. The top three placers will earn the gold, silver, and bronze medals. Can Shane Lowry or Rory McIlroy earn one?McIlroy certainly has a strong chance. In fact, he's tied for the third-best odds of winning the competition. At +700, he's tied with Jon Rahm but behind Scottie Scheffler and Xander Schauffele.Can Shane Lowry or Rory McIlroy medal? (Image via GETTY)Lowry is a bit more of a long shot. He is +2400. Those are the 12th-best odds, so he still has a decent chance of earning a medal. Here are the full odds via CBS Sports:Scottie Scheffler (USA) +300Xander Schauffele (USA) +525Jon Rahm (ESP) +700Rory McIlroy (IRL) +700Ludvig Aberg (SWE) +1100Collin Morikawa (USA) +1100Viktor Hovland (NOR) +1700Tommy Fleetwood (GBR) +2000Tom Kim (KOR) +2000Joaquin Niemann (CHI) +2000Hideki Matsuyama (JPN) +2200Shane Lowry (IRL) +2400Corey Conners (CAN) +3000Matthew Fitzpatrick (GBR) +3000Alex Noren (SWE) +3500Sepp Straka (AUT) +4000Matthieu Pavon (FRA) +4500Min Woo Lee (AUS) +5000Byeong-Hun An (KOR) +5000Carlos Ortiz (MEX) +5000Wyndham Clark (USA) +5000Christiaan Bezuidenhout (RSA) +5000Abraham Ancer (MEX) +6000Jason Day (AUS) +6000Guido Migliozzi (ITA) +6500Stephan Jaeger (GER) +7000Adrian Meronk (POL) +7000Thomas Detry (BEL) +7000Thorbjorn Olesen (DEN) +7500Nicolai Hojgaard (DEN) +7500Ryan Fox (NZL) +8500Mito Pereira (CHI) +8500David Puig (ESP) +9000CT Pan (TPE) +10000Victor Perez (FRA) +10000Keita Nakajima (JPN) +10000Erik Van Rooyen (RSA) +10000Emiliano Grillo (ARG) +12500Nick Taylor (CAN) +12500Kevin Yu (TPE) +15000Matteo Manassero (ITA) +15000Sami Valimaki (FIN) +17500Kiradech Aphibarnrat (THA) +20000Matti Schmid (GER) +20000Alejandro Tosti (ARG) +20000Joel Girrbach (SUI) +20000Gavin Green (MAS) +25000Shubhankar Sharma (IND) +25000Daniel Hillier (NZL) +25000Adrien De Chassart (BEL) +30000Fabrizio Zanotti (PAR) +30000Tapio Pulkkanen (FIN) +30000Phachara Khongwatmai (THA) +30000Nico Echavarria (COL) +30000Gaganjeet Bhullar (IND) +40000Kris Ventura (NOR) +40000Dou Zecheng (CHN) +40000Camilo Villegas (COL) +50000Carl Yuan (CHN) +50000Rafael Campos (PUR) +50000The world's best (limited to four per country) will all compete for the three medals on August 1.