The Daily Courier

3 ex-presidents at Presidents Cup

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JERSEY CITY, N.J. — The Presidents Cup is living up to its name like never before. The three previous U.S. presidents will be on the first tee at Liberty National for the start of the matches Thursday, and the PGA Tour is bracing for a Sunday visit by President Donald Trump.

PGA Tour Commission­er Jay Monahan said Trump’s people have been out to the course to take a “good, hard look at the property” and are working closely with the tournament's security side.

It would be the first time a sitting president has attended the event since Bill Clinton was at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club in Virginia in 2000.

“We hope he comes and he'll be welcomed by us and by our players," Monahan said.

The Presidents Cup, matches between Americans and players from every other continent except Europe, began in 1994 and since 1998 has invited sitting heads of state from the host country as honorary chairman. Trump accepted his invitation, his first active role with the PGA Tour since a World Golf Championsh­ip moved away from Trump National Doral in Florida during the presidenti­al campaign.

Monahan had said the reason for moving away from Doral was related to finding a title sponsor, not politics, and he doesn't consider a Trump appearance at Liberty National anything but a golf event.

“We are not endorsing a person,” Monahan said. “We are not endorsing a party.”

He said “both sides of the aisles" will be represente­d Thursday with the appearance of Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama, the first time three former presidents have been at the event. All served as honorary chairman of the Presidents Cup while in office.

“This event has never been a political event,” Monahan said. “It’s been a golf event that united the world’s best players together, united fans all over the world in a team competitio­n that has done and will continue to do a lot of goodwill.”

Already this year, the PGA of America played its Senior PGA Championsh­ip at Trump National outside the nation's capital, and the U.S. Golf Associatio­n held the U.S. Women's Open at Trump National in Bedminster, New Jersey, where the president spends many weekends.

The Presidents Cup comes one week after widespread demonstrat­ions during NFL games in response to Trump's comments that players should stand for the playing of the national anthem or be fired. More than 200 players and owners found ways to show dissent by either kneeling, locking arms in solidarity or staying in the locker room during the anthem.

U.S. captain Steve Stricker said Tuesday that his 12 players and four assistants will stand together.

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