Toronto Star

Patriots aare unlikely to visit with Trump

Unlike Eagles a year ago, they’re still welcome if they can find the time

- KEN BELSON AND MICHAEL CROWLEY

The New England Patriots won tthe Super Bowl on Feb. 3. Yet, as the t new NFL season approach- es in two weeks, it is all but certain that they will not have the customary congratula­tory ceremony at the White House, aan event that has often been tense or divisive under U.S. President Donald Trump.

The lack of a ceremony, which both sides said had nothing to do with politics but everything to do with poor scheduling, is eeven more curious because the team’s owner, Robert K. Kraft, is a friend and supporter of Trump’s. Coach Bill Belichick wrote a letter of support to Trump days before the 2016 election. And Tom Brady, the team’s star quarterbac­k, is known to have a relationsh­ip with Trump as well.

Yet, according to team and White House officials, schedul- ing conflicts have lowered the chances that the Patriots, who defeated the Los Angeles Rams for a record-tying sixth Super Bowl win, would visit. The two sides said they had been unable to find a convenient date despite the president’s eagerness to have the Patriots visit.

“We would welcome them to the White House in the future should a future date work out,” a White House spokespers­on said.

At this point, the rigours of practice and pre-season games make it all but certain that the Patriots, famous for particular­ly discipline­d training under Belichick, will not find time to detour for a visit.

The Patriots play the Washington Redskins in Washington on Oct. 6 and the Baltimore Ravens in Baltimore on Nov. 3, but NFL teams are not known to alter their schedules in the days before regular-season games.

This is likely to be the second consecutiv­e year the NFL champion has not visited the White House. In 2018, the president disinvited the Philadelph­ia Eagles after most of the players and coaches said they would boycott the visit in response to the president’s demands that players stand during the national anthem at games.

After the Patriots’ win in February, three players — Devin and Jason McCourty and Duron Harmon — said they would skip the visit to the White House if they were invited.

The Patriots have visited the White House five times after Super Bowl victories. Four of those trips came in the April following f the Super Bowl and one in the subsequent May. Teams are typically together for workouts in the spring, making it a convenient time.

( At the ceremony in 2017, soon after Trump took office, at least two dozen players skipped the event, including Brady, who said he was spending time with his ailing mother. Harmon and Devin McCourty also did not attend. Jason McCourty was not yet a member of the team.)

The two sides had chosen a date for the Patriots to visit in April, but when that fell through, the White House gave the team several alternativ­es. The Patriots chose a date in May from that list. But the president’s schedule shifted, and the visit was cancelled. Team workouts resumed in June.

Kraft ran into legal trouble in February when he was charged with soliciting a sex worker in Florida, but the case was thrown out in May for a lack of evidence. The White House official said the case had nothing to do with the scheduling problems.

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