The Day

Bush leaves legacy of passion for golf and fast play NBA ROUNDUP

- By DOUG FERGUSON

As much as former President George H.W. Bush loved golf, he was never on the course very long.

For all his passion and heritage in golf — his grandfathe­r and father were USGA presidents — the 41st president was mainly known for being the best example of the Rule 6-7: “Play without undue delay.”

Davis Love III discovered this during one outing at Cape Arundel Golf Club in Kennebunkp­ort, Maine.

“We were playing and one of the Secret Service guys, his phone starts ringing,” Love said. “He said, ‘Mr. President, it’s President Clinton.’ And President Bush says, ‘Well, I’m hitting.’ He hands me the phone and says, ‘Talk to him for a second.’ So I’m there talking to President Clinton while President Bush is hitting his shot. You just never knew what was going to happen next.”

Bush died Friday night at his home in Houston at age 94.

“His name is synonymous with golf,” said Tiger Woods, who played with Bush in Houston while still an amateur. “Being around him for all these years and getting a chance to be around him at Presidents Cup ... he was such a class act. Anyone who’s ever been around him knows how much he loved his golf and how much he supported it and how much we’re going to miss him.”

He was one of two presidents to be inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame, in 2011, two years after President Dwight D. Eisenhower, and his involvemen­t went well beyond the golf he played so quickly.

He was honorary chairman of The First Tee, the program that began in 1997 to bring golf’s core values to kids. He was chairman of the Presidents Cup, and stayed involved by rarely missing the biennial match, whether it was in Australia or South Africa.

Former PGA Tour Commission­er Tim Finchem said at Bush’s induction ceremony that The First Tee had reached 4.7 million youngsters and “but for President Bush, that would not have happened.”

“He attended openings of facilities. He wrote letters to people that gave money. He traveled, he spoke, he got on the telephone,” Finchem said. “He wasn’t a chairman in name only. He worked at it.”

Instead of ribbons, which are hard to find on short notice in the Bahamas, some players at the Hero World Challenge wrote “41” on their caps.

Love was among the regulars whom Bush would invite to Kennebunkp­ort for golf; Love said they were treated like family.

“He was so excited about Fred Couples or me or Brad Faxon trying to beat the course record at Cape Arundel,” Love said. “We wanted to go fishing or play horseshoes, and he wanted to play golf. But it only took us three hours. He just loved being out there.”

The running joke at Cape Arundel is that Bush used to claim he had the course record — not a score, but fastest to play 18 holes. Woods could attest to that. “It was basically club, ball, one look, gone,” he said.

Bush also claimed to have his name on at least one trophy, saying in 2011 that he once captured the club championsh­ip.

“I dusted a guy named Chad Brown,” Bush said. “My name is embellishe­d there. It’s on the board. You can’t take it away from me.”

His golf heritage dates to his maternal grandfathe­r, George H. Walker, after whom the Walker Cup is named. His father, Prescott Bush, was a scratch golfer.

Celtics 118, T-wolves 109

Gordon Hayward had a season-high 30 points and added nine rebounds and eight assists, helping revived Boston win its third straight game by staving off Minnesota on Saturday night. Hayward, now in a bench role after starting the season slowly, scored 11 of Boston's final 15 points over the last 3 1/2 minutes of the game and made four of five shots from 3-point range. Kyrie Irving pitched in 21 points and nine assists, Jayson Tatum added 19 points and nine rebounds, and Marcus Morris had 16 points on 4-for-7 shooting from 3-point range for the Celtics. They lost eight of 12 games before starting their streak. Derrick Rose scored 26 points for the Timberwolv­es, who fell to 9-4 at home and 7-3 since trading All-Star Jimmy Butler. Karl-Anthony Towns had 20 points and nine rebounds and Robert Covington had 17 points and 10 rebounds for the Wolves, who allowed more than 103 points for the first time in eight games and saw their four-game winning streak stopped. Despite missing six of his eight attempts from 3-point range, Irving was the natural catalyst for the Celtics for much of the night. When Andrew Wiggins couldn't quite corral a loose ball at the top of the key on Minnesota's end in the third quarter, Irving snagged it and raced the other way to feed Tatum for a lob pass and an easy dunk for a 6755 lead by Boston.

Knicks 136, Bucks 134 (OT)

Emmanuel Mudiay scored 28 points to lead New York to an overtime win over Milwaukee. Rookie forward Kevin Knox scored a career-high 26 points as New York snapped a two-game losing streak. Damyean Dotson and Tim Hardaway Jr. added 21 points each. Noah Vonleh contribute­d 15 points. Giannis Antetokoun­mpo had 33 points and 19 rebounds for Milwaukee, which has lost three of its last five. Eric Bledsoe added 27 points. Malcolm Brogdon finished with 22 points, Brook Lopez had 13, and Khris Middleton and Tony Snell each chipped in with 10. New York took its first lead since Hardaway's 3-pointer midway through the first quarter on Enes Kanter's jumper from the wing 3:13 into the third period, giving the Knicks a 71-70 advantage.

Wizards 102, Nets 88

John Wall scored 30 points, Bradley Beal added 22 and Washington handed Brooklyn its sixth straight loss. Markieff Morris rebounded from a 1-for-10 shooting night Friday in a loss at Philadelph­ia to score 20 points on 9-for-12 shooting. He had 15 points in the fourth quarter. Allen Crabbe led Brooklyn with 14 points. The losing streak is the Nets' longest since an eight-game skid in February.

 ?? PAT SULLIVAN/AP FILE PHOTO ?? In this Oct. 22, 2010 photo, former President George H.W. Bush, left, and Arnold Palmer acknowledg­e the gallery at the Champions Tour tournament in The Woodlands, Texas. Bush, who died Friday, was one of two presidents inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame.
PAT SULLIVAN/AP FILE PHOTO In this Oct. 22, 2010 photo, former President George H.W. Bush, left, and Arnold Palmer acknowledg­e the gallery at the Champions Tour tournament in The Woodlands, Texas. Bush, who died Friday, was one of two presidents inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame.

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