National Post (National Edition)

Spectre of Trump hovers over Senior PGA tourney

POTUS’ GOLF PROPERTIES ARE A POLITICAL DISCUSSION, LIKE IT OR NOT

- BARRY SVRLUGA Washington Post

They are staging a golf tournament toward the eastern edge of Loudoun County this week, right on the shores of the Potomac River, less than 30 miles from the White House. In another time, it might be nice to chat about whether the course is fit to host a major championsh­ip or whether Bernhard Langer’s recent performanc­e on the Champions Tour, for the over-50 set, compares to other runs of dominance golf has produced in the past.

But the host club for the Senior PGA Championsh­ip is Trump National Golf Club-Washington, D.C. Its very name grabs the eye, if not fully raises the brow above it.

There’s no telling what news will break when, for the first time in the Donald Trump presidency, a Trump property will host a golf tournament. But something will happen because if we have learned anything over the past five months, it’s that something always does. And now golf finds itself in the middle of whatever the news cycle might churn up.

The golfers, for the most part, don’t mind.

“President Trump is my friend,” said Rocco Mediate, who won this event last year.

“I think he’s doing a hell of a job,” said John Daly, who said he has been a friend of the president for 25 years. “I really do.”

“I believe in almost every policy he believes in,” said Fred Funk, who wore a shirt with the block letters T-RU-M-P over his heart, which technicall­y is an endorsemen­t of Trump’s golf brand rather than of his policies.

So in case there was any question about which political direction the PGA Tour — and, by extension, the Champions Tour — leans, well, now we know. Wait. What’s that you say? “We’re simply not going to cross that line into politics.”

That last quote was from Mike Davis, the head of the U.S. Golf Associatio­n. The USGA has nothing to do with the event at Trump’s course in Sterling, Va., because the Senior PGA is staged by the PGA of America. However, both organizati­ons know something about wading in Trump’s waters. Davis was speaking to reporters Wednesday at another Trump National, the one in Bedminster, N.J., because that club will host the U.S. Women’s Open later this summer.

In an odd way, for that women’s event, the existence of the Access Hollywood tape from last year might be more important than the existence of any tape Trump may or may not have of conversati­ons in the Oval Office. It’s hard to imagine a field of women competing on the course owned by a man who said he routinely sexually assaulted women, but that’s where we are. Mr. Davis? “Let me make it very clear that (when) we came here, this was all about coming to a great golf course to play the greatest championsh­ip in women’s golf,” Davis said during the Bedminster news conference. “You know, the USGA, since its founding in 1894, has never been involved with politics. Our focus is solely on the game of golf and we appreciate that there’s some out there that want to make this a political event, but we’re not.” to get on his wagon and ride with him and let him do what he’s doing and leave him alone.”

Like Funk, Mediate wears a “Trump” logo on his vest when he plays, an arrangemen­t that allows him to play any of Trump’s golf properties around the world. He said he has had just a couple of issues with fans.

“Just like, ‘What are you wearing that for?’” Mediate said. “And I said, ‘Well, you have two choices. One, you can come across the ropes and the next choice is you’re out of here.’ And I’ve had them tossed a few times.”

Funk, who began wearing the Trump logo this year — again, as a way to gain access to Trump’s course in Jupiter, Fla., where Funk is moving — said he has encountere­d “a lot more positive than negative” reactions from fans who noted his associatio­n with the president.

“People can state their opinion,” Funk said. “But don’t catch me at a bad time because I’ll get in their face about it. There’s a time and a place and out on a golf course will not be the place.”

But we have this arrangemen­t now, an awkward one at that. Trump may come to his own course Sunday for the final round. If he does, it won’t be just a real estate mogul coming to check out how the staff pulled off the event. It’ll be the president of the United States standing on one of his eponymous properties. It’ll be political, commercial and controvers­ial.

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