USA TODAY International Edition

Trump can be atwitter about Super Bowl field

- Martin Rogers mjrogers@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports FOLLOW REPORTER MARTIN ROGERS @ mrogers USA T for insight and analysis on the latest in sports.

Donald Trump spent most of last year’s Super Bowl, according to the brash informatio­n source that is his Twitter feed, utterly bored and sensing politics offered far more excitement than football’s biggest game.

Maybe he had a point. Admittedly, Trump’s resounding comeback at crunchtime of the presidenti­al campaign nine months later offered the kind of remarkable upset rarely seen even in the world of sports.

Yet Trump is unlikely to be apathetic to this year’s Super Bowl. Whatever the outcome of Sunday’s NFC and AFC Championsh­ip Games, he’ll find himself with a link to the teams that trek to Houston in February for pro football’s ultimate referendum.

If Trump the candidate found Super Bowl 50 a snoozer, the White House’s newest occupant might discover Super Bowl LI far more to his liking, what with so many of his pals potentiall­y involved in the action.

First of all, there is the obvious connection, in the form of a certain New England Patriots quarterbac­k. No one knows for sure whether the relationsh­ip between Tom Brady and Trump is or was a full- fledged bromance or simply a convenient acquaintan­ceship that was seized upon by the incoming POTUS and played for political leverage.

However, few links between a politician and a pinup pigskin hurler have generated more discussion, right from the moment that Make America Great Again cap was spotted perched in Brady’s locker in September 2015.

Back then, Brady described Trump as “a good friend” and said it would be “great” if he took office, though that prospect seemed like little more than a Hail Mary at the time. The Patriots star has largely kept quiet on the matter since. Trump, though, had no reservatio­ns about celebratin­g his connection with the football icon, telling a pre- election rally in New Hampshire that he had secured the quarterbac­k’s vote and wholeheart­ed support.

Trump is also friends with Patriots owner Robert Kraft and coach Bill Belichick. The business tycoon- turned- politician dined with Belichick and his longtime girlfriend, Linda Holliday, last year and revealed he’d received a letter of support from Belichick just days before November’s victory against Hillary Clinton.

However, it should not be assumed Trump roots for only the Pats. Just like with Brady, Trump also has been a frequent golf partner of Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Ben Roethlisbe­rger, as he excitedly detailed to a rally of supporters in the battlegrou­nd state of Pennsylvan­ia in October.

The timing of that event came at a crucial part of the campaign, just as it appeared Trump’s bid for the White House would be derailed by the release of a lewd recording. Many wondered if referencin­g Roethlisbe­rger, who had his own problems regarding complaints of his conduct toward women, was a mistake. Yet that didn’t stop Trump, who offered up an odd anecdote of a golf adventure in which Roethlisbe­rger crushed a ball so hard into a tree that the tree subsequent­ly died.

Trump has fewer links to the NFC Championsh­ip Game but still has meaningful connection­s to it. Four weeks ago, he was presented with a Green Bay Packers jersey by Wisconsin political heavyweigh­ts Paul Ryan and Gov. Scott Walker, with his name and No. 45 ( the number of his presidency) stitched on the back.

Vice President- elect Mike Pence also was given a jersey, a replica of the No. 12 worn by Aaron Rodgers. Ever since the rally, the Packers have been perfect, winning their last three regularsea­son games and two more in the playoffs, including Sunday’s nail- biter against the Dallas Cowboys, the kind of late campaign run of which Trump is proud.

That leaves us only with the Atlanta Falcons, who host the Packers in the final game at the Georgia Dome, where support for Trump might be in short supply after he took on the whole city.

Trump’s adversary of choice the last week has been Rep. John Lewis, who said he’d skip Friday’s inaugurati­on and says Trump’s presidency is not “legitimate.”

Trump hit back with a series of scathing tweets about the city of Atlanta, claiming sections of it are “crime infested,” “in horrible shape” and “falling apart” and that Lewis should spend more time worrying about problems closer to home.

The Falcons are the least storied of the remaining teams with a single, unsuccessf­ul Super Bowl appearance in their history. As the postseason reaches its most critical stage, they are faced with some famous names yet spurred by having confounded their skeptics just by making it this far.

In that sense, maybe not so different to Trump after all.

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA, AP ?? Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady, right, has said he considers Donald Trump “a good friend.”
ELISE AMENDOLA, AP Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady, right, has said he considers Donald Trump “a good friend.”
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