The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

R&A policy was to steer clear of Trump-owned Turnberry

- Steve Scott

Ayear after Donald Trump acquired Turnberry for a knock-down price of $65 million – or at least we thought it was knockdown at the time – I was chatting to a very senior R&A man about it.

It was just after the much-loved and stunning Ayrshire venue had hosted, to date, its last major championsh­ip: the chaotic Women’s Open of 2015.

Trump, just beginning the journey that eventually ended with him in the White House, treated the championsh­ip like his personal fiefdom that week.

He buzzed the course with his helicopter during actual play, disturbing the players below.

He noisily toured the course at ground level, again during play, with TV cameras in tow.

He held a madcap, showpiece press conference in the hotel, corralling golf reporters in the belief they were getting a golf story but instead forcing them to listen to an hour and a half of “presidenti­al” hectoring.

There’s been many press conference in my near 40 years in the business I’ve wanted to get out of, but that was easily the most torturous I can recall.

Speaking to the R& A man, I noted that the name of the venue had changed to Trump Turnberry. If the Open went back there, I suggested, it might be the way that the man could get his name actually engraved on the Claret Jug.

Usually an avuncular, smiling chap, the R& A man’s face changed gravely and his eyes narrowed. “That will never happen” he stated purposeful­ly.

Maybe he just meant they wouldn’t engrave the Jug that way.

But e ven yesterday ’s

statement from the R&A about Trump continued along similar lines: they couldn’ t even bring themselves to say the man’s name.

The Turnberr y Ailsa, everyone agrees, is one of the best courses on the planet, not just one of the best in the Open’s pool of venues.

An updating a few years ago by Martin Ebert, the R&A’S designer of choice, has made it even better.

The R&A never said they wouldn’ t go back to Turnberry.

Every time we’ve asked – and it’s been at least twice a year – former chief executive Peter Dawson and his successor Martin

Slumbers have insisted remains in “the pool”.

Yesterday’s statement from Slumbers is much more explicit.

“We had no plans to stage any of our championsh­ips at Turnberry and will not do so in the foreseeabl­e future,” it read.

“We will not return until we are convinced that the focus will be on the championsh­ip, the players and the course itself and we do not believe that is achievable in the current circumstan­ces.”

This might seem like a change of policy, but it’s only publicly admitting what the R&A has been quietly doing for the last five years. it

After the chaos of the 2015 Women’s Open, there was no way the R&A were going to let Trump’s gargantuan ego overshadow their precious championsh­ip.

Their policy was simply to ignore this enormous elephant in the room as best they could, until it either expired or rumbled off somewhere else.

There are also the issues that Turnberry presents in terms of infrastruc­ture, road access and hotel rooms.

In addition, it attracts the smallest crowds of any host venue – just 120,000 in 2009, the last time the Open was there.

Trump bought Turnberry

for $65m from Leisurecor­p, the people behind the Jumerai Estates in Dubai.

According to the accounts since, $75m has been ploughed into doing the place up.

Losses now total $61m since Trump took over, although it did turn in a small profit in the last annual accounts.

While that’s extreme, t h e r e ’s nothing new in Turnberry losing money. Fo r all that it is a magnificen­t site and golf course, it’s really been a money pit for a succession of owners.

The biggest hit for the place was that it was an Open venue. But the R&A haven’t taken the Women’s or Senior Opens there since 2015, nor even one of their amateur events.

And they’re not back while Trump owner.

While you might think him winding up a mob of white supremacis­ts, conspiracy theorists and actual armed terrorists to assault the Washington Capitol building was the tipping point, it’s actually been pretty much the R&A’S policy all along. going is the

Some of golf still too slow to dump Trump

The PGA of America, conservati­ve with both a small and a big ‘c’, had already pulled next year’s PGA Championsh­ip from Trump National in New Jersey because they can no longer stand to be associated with the president.

Who’s next? There are a host of golf ’s biggest names who attached themselves in some way to Trump’s nowtoxic brand, including the biggest names of all.

Jack Nicklaus endorsed Trump for the presidenti­al election and while this column a few weeks back stressed we shouldn’t decry Jack’s great achievemen­ts for that, the longer his silence now continues, the more his reputation is tarnished.

Just a day after last We d n e s d a y ’ s debacle, Gary Player and Annika Sorenstam sneaked into the White House by the back door to accept the Pr e s i d e n t i a l Me d a l of Freedom from Trump in private.

I get that the medal is a very big thing in the US, but this was ridiculous­ly insensitiv­e and obstinate.

All of golf needs to immediatel­y join the headlong rush to dissociate themselves from Trump’s poisonous presence.

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 ??  ?? PERSONAL FIEFDOM: Donald Trump during the second day of the Women’s British Open at Turnberry in 2015.
PERSONAL FIEFDOM: Donald Trump during the second day of the Women’s British Open at Turnberry in 2015.

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