Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump, game of golf always a bad match

- By Doug Ferguson

Donald Trump was never a comfortabl­e fit for golf.

Not as president of the United States, a polarizing position long before the advent of Twitter or any other form of social media. Not even when he merged his affection for golf with his ambition to cater to the wealthy at his hotels and golf courses.

The star of any golf tournament at the elite level typically is either the player or the course. Unless it was on his course, and then Trump made it about him.

And now it’s coming to an end, if it’s not there already.

He effectivel­y has been fired.

Trump has been silenced on Twitter and impeached for “incitement of insurrecti­on” stemming from his supporters invading the nation’s Capitol last week. On a much smaller scale — it should be, anyway — he suffered a loss when the PGA Championsh­ip was taken away from his golf club in New Jersey in 2022.

The PGA of America voted Sunday night to terminate the contract. More than being the right thing to do, it was the only thing.

“We find ourselves in a political situation not of our making,” Seth Waugh, the CEO of the PGA of America, told The AP.

The contract with Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, was signed in 2014, when Trump’s platform was reality TV and not the White House. A year later, Trump announced he was seeking the Republican nomination for president, and then he really started to make golf feel uncomforta­ble about its relationsh­ip with him.

His disparagin­g remarks about Mexican immigrants in announcing his candidacy in June 2015 forced golf organizati­ons to step uneasily into politics. The backlash was still strong when Trump went on Golf Channel and said the golf industry supported him because “they know I’m right.”

The PGA Tour, LPGA Tour, PGA of America and USGA issued a statement to say he was wrong.

And a week later, the PGA Grand Slam of Golf at his Trump National Los Angeles was canceled.

It wasn’t just tournament­s at his golf courses.

Trump said in an interview with Golf Digest in 2014 that golf had it all wrong by trying to make the game accessible to the masses. “I would make golf aspiration­al instead of trying to bring everybody into golf that they’re never gonna be there anyway,” he said.

The R&A has been dodging questions about returning the British Open to Turnberry ever since Trump bought the picturesqu­e links on the Ayrshire coast of Scotland in 2014. It finally spoke up Monday morning with a statement that it won’t return there “until we are convinced that the focus will be on the championsh­ip, the players and the course itself.”

Along with the U.S. Women’s Open at Bedminster and the Senior PGA Championsh­ip at Trump National in Sterling, Virginia, Trump courses once hosted two PGA Tour stops (Doral and Puerto Rico), and the first big tournament at one of his courses was LPGA Tour Championsh­ip at Trump Internatio­nal in West Palm Beach, Florida. He made sure each player had a BMW as a courtesy car. He invited them to his Mar-A-Lago resort.

And he made sure he was the show. At the World Golf Championsh­ip at Doral in 2015, Rory McIlroy was so disgusted at his shot on the par-3 eight that he heaved his 3-iron into the lake. That happens in a sport that can be annoying even to the best. Trump seized on the moment by hiring divers to retrieve the club, and he made a spectacle of returning the club to McIlroy on the range before the final round. Never mind that McIlroy already had a replacemen­t.

“He’s never one to miss an opportunit­y,” McIlroy said.

That’s one reason Doral, a staple of the Florida swing since 1962, hosted a PGA Tour event for the final time in March 2016.

It wasn’t about politics. It was about Trump. The tour couldn’t find a sponsor willing to pony up some $12 million a year knowing it would be sharing the stage with Trump.

The tournament went to Mexico, of all places.

Back then, the relationsh­ip golf had with Trump was made difficult by his ego and his elitism.

Now it’s about the threat to democracy, violence and destructio­n that killed five people, including a Capitol Police officer.

There is no relationsh­ip with Trump and tournament golf, not anymore.

Golf can’t let it happen again.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/GETTY ?? Four days after the attack on the U.S. Capitol, the PGA of America stripped Donald Trump’s course in Bedminster, N.J., of the 2022 PGA Championsh­ip.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/GETTY Four days after the attack on the U.S. Capitol, the PGA of America stripped Donald Trump’s course in Bedminster, N.J., of the 2022 PGA Championsh­ip.

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