Trump’s Bedminster club ready for golfers and controversy with LIV tour stop

The PGA of America moved its 2022 championship away from Trump National after the Jan. 6 insurrection.

With former President Donald Trump spending his summers in the township, Bedminster is accustomed to having celebrities within its borders.

This weekend, the township will host 48 professional golfers as they compete in the new LIV Golf’s third event at Trump National Golf Club on Lamington Road.

For Trump, hosting the controversial breakaway tour’s event at his club could be sweet revenge. The PGA of America moved its 2022 championship, one of golf’s four major championships, away from Trump National after the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol. Trump and the PGA later reached an out-of-court settlement over the move.

Last week, on his Truth Social site, Trump encouraged current players on the PGA Tour to jump to LIV, where there is guaranteed money, no cuts and shorter tournaments.

“All of those golfers that remain ‘loyal’ to the very disloyal PGA, in all of its different forms, will pay a big price when the inevitable MERGER with LIV comes, and you get nothing but a big ‘thank you’ from PGA officials who are making Millions of Dollars a year,” Trump wrote. “If you don’t take the money now, you will get nothing after the merger takes place, and only say how smart the original signees were.”

Trump will host another LIV event Oct. 27-30 at Trump National Doral in Miami.

The PGA Championship was expected to draw tens of thousands of spectators each day of the four-round tournament. But there have been no concrete estimates of how many spectators will attend the LIV Golf Invitational Bedminster to be held from Friday to Sunday.

However, because LIV is backed by Saudi Arabian money and Trump is involved, some of those who might be showing up at the tournament won’t be there to watch golf.

Members of 9/11 Justice, a group whose loved ones were killed in the 9/11 terrorist attacks and believe Saudi Arabia should be held accountable, have urged Trump to cancel the event. The group demonstrated outside LIV’s previous event outside Portland.

Previous demonstrators. both supporters and opponents of Trump, were allowed to gather at a “free speech” zone at the township’s Clarence P. Dillon Library at the corner of Route 206 and Lamington Road.

For those who want to watch golf, tickets are $75 per day. Gates will open at 10 a.m. before the 1 p.m. start on each of the tournament’s three days. Discounts of 25% are available for youths, students, teachers, medical personnel and first responders. Military personnel and one guest will be admitted for free. Unlike tournaments on the PGA Tour, LIV will have a shotgun start with the 48 golfers starting on threesomes on each of the course’s 18 holes.

But it’s not going to be the normal shotgun start. Members of the Frog-X  Parachute Team will skydive onto the course to kick off the action.

Besides the golf, the tournament will offer a Fan Village with what LIV is calling “a food festival-style atmosphere.” There will also be a LIV Kids Zone for children which will include crafts soft play equipment, glow-in-the-dark mini-golf putting course and educational activities.

Also within the Fan Village will be LIV Golf’s Performance Center, featuring the latest golf technology and golf simulator bays. Fans can also test putting skills on the Zen Green Stage, touted as golf’s most advanced indoor playing surface, recreating any makeable putt in the world.

There will also be the Metaverse, where fans can experience virtual reality golf exhibits. LIV Golf’s Eco Village will offer a chance to relax in an eco-friendly setting where fans can refill water bottles at a hydro station, charge cellphones by pedaling a bike, watch a 3D printer create golf tees from recycled plastic and attempt to chip golf balls into a canoe to raise money for local charities.

There will be two free parking locations – Red Tail Farm, 1100 Rattlesnake Bridge Road, just north of the Interstate 78 intersection and 655 Lamington Road. From the Lamington parking lot shuttle buses will take spectators to the main tournament gate at Red Tail Farm.

The field will include 10 major champions with a combined 20 majors tournament victories, four former world No. 1 players and half of the competitors currently ranked in the top 100. Players will compete for a $25 million purse.

Featured players will be Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka, Sergio Garcia, Paul Casey, Lee Westwood, Ian Poulter, Louis Oosthuizen, Graeme McDowell, Martin Kaymer and Patrick Reed.

Mike Deak is a reporter for mycentraljersey.com. To get unlimited access to his articles on Somerset and Hunterdon counties, please subscribe or activate your digital account today.

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Did former President Donald Trump really make a hole-in-one? He said ‘it is 100% true’

Former President Donald Trump issued a statement Monday confirming that he made a hole-in-one.

Former President Donald Trump issued a statement Monday confirming that he made a hole-in-one at his golf club over the weekend.

After Senate candidate Tim Swain (R) of South Carolina posted a photo to Twitter captioned “Trump just made a hole-in-one,” many critics took to social media in doubt, questioning Trump’s abilities.

“Many people are asking, so I’ll give it to you now, it is 100% true,” Trump said in the statement. “It took place at Trump International Gold Club in West Palm Beach, Florida on the 7th hole, which was playing 181-yards into a slight wind.”

A spokesperson of Trump’s tweeted a video of Trump going to retrieve the golf ball after his ace.

“I hit a 5-iron, which sailed magnificently into a rather strong wind, with approximately 5 feet of cut, whereupon it bounced twice and then went clank, into the hole,” said Trump.

Trump shared that he was golfing with professionals Ernie Els, Gene Sauers, Ken Duke and Mike Goodes.

“These great tour players noticed it before I did because their eyes are slightly better, but on that one hole, their swings weren’t.”

Trump’s statement continued: “Anyway, there’s a lot of chatter about it, quite exciting, and people everywhere seem to be asking for the facts. Playing with that group of wonderful, talented players was a lot of fun. The match was Ernie and me (with no strokes) against Gene, Mike, and Ken. I won’t tell you who won because I am a very modest individual, and you will then say I was bragging — and I don’t like people who brag!”

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Contact Analis Bailey at aabailey@usatoday.com or on Twitter @analisbailey.

NYC’s Ferry Point gets new management group; Trump team looking for $30M ‘cancellation fee’

Lawyers for the Trump team say NYC needs to pay a $30 million “termination fee” because the breach of contract assertion has no legal merit.

A new management company will assume responsibility for running New York City’s Ferry Point — a stunning track that overlooks the city’s dramatic skyline — but the departure from former President Donald Trump’s organization has some saying the process has been ramrodded through.

On Tuesday, a hearing was held in advance of a vote, and lawyers from the Trump team insisted course designer Jack Nicklaus had direct oversight on any decision regarding the course’s management. That wasn’t enough to sway a city panel, however, as members approved the switch on Wednesday. Two panel members voted against the measure, and one insisted that the process needed more time to be thoroughly vetted.

Formerly known as Trump Golf Links at Ferry Point, the links-style golf course opened in 2014 and debuted at No. 2 for New York on Golfweek’s Best: State-by-State Courses You Can Play list in 2015, trailing only Bethpage Black. When Ferry Point opened, the city signed a 20-year agreement with the Trump Organization.

While the course opened beneath the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge (on the site of a former New York City landfill) in 2014, a 20,000-square-foot clubhouse, designed by the architectural firm Hart Howerton, was completed in 2019.

Donald Trump
President Donald Trump plays golf at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia, on Nov. 28, 2020. The former president said Ferry Point, which his group previously managed, could be the best public golf facility in the country. Photo by Alex Brandon/Associated Press

Mayor Bill de Blasio announced earlier in the year that the city would terminate contracts with the Trump Organization in the wake of the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection, which sent lawmakers running for cover in fear for their lives and left five people dead and dozens injured.

Lawyers for the Trump team have said the city will need to fork over a $30 million “termination fee” because the breach of contract assertion has no legal merit, according to reporting by The City, a digital news platform in New York City.

Trump released a statement on Oct. 12 blasting the mayor.

“The course has received rave reviews, is considered one of the top ten open to the public facilities in the United States (could even be the best!), is designed for tournament play, and Mayor De Blasio wants to take it away after all of the work was so successfully done, and so much money was spent,” Trump said in the statement. “So unfair—this is what happens in Communist Countries, not in America!”

Back in June, the Trump Organization legal team said the termination was motivated solely by political pressure. The group invested significantly in the project after New York City failed to complete the course, which ranks 77th on the Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in the United States list, as judged by Golfweek’s nationwide network of raters.

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“After the City wasted hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayer money in its prior failed attempts to complete this project, we stepped in and, at the City’s request (much like Wollman Rink in the 1980s), invested over $30 million of our own money to deliver to the people of the City of New York what has been widely recognized as one of the most magnificent public golf experiences anywhere in the country,” said a statement from the Trump Organization.

Atlanta-based Bobby Jones Links was chosen to take over the property, which means assuming daily golf operations, handling instruction programs on-site and coordinating food and beverage concessions.

“We are honored the City has selected Bobby Jones Links to be the next steward of one of New York City’s most remarkable recreational assets,” said Whitney Crouse, founding partner of Bobby Jones Links. “Ferry Point Links is one of the premier golf courses and experiences in the nation and we are honored to bring our service-based culture and extensive industry knowledge to this highly acclaimed golf course. Bobby Jones Links has been an innovator in the golf course management industry for more than 22 years with collective experience at more than 200 courses worldwide.”

According to a release, the new management group will make some changes at the course after it closes in November.

“The golf course and high-quality dining experiences will not change,” said Crouse. “However, we do plan to make enhancements that we believe will benefit the residents and golfers of New York.”

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Did NYC wrongly cancel a deal with Trump’s Ferry Point course solely due to the insurrection? That’s what a lawsuit contends.

A lawsuit filed in New York State Supreme Court this week alleges that the mayor of New York City canceled a contract with The Trump Organization’s Ferry Point golf course solely as a political response to the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. The …

A lawsuit filed in New York State Supreme Court this week alleges that the mayor of New York City canceled a contract with The Trump Organization’s Ferry Point golf course solely as a political response to the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

The Trump Organization legal team said the termination was motivated solely by political pressure. The group invested significantly in the project after New York City failed to complete the course, which ranks 77th on the Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in the United States list, as judged by our nationwide network of raters.

The attack, which sent lawmakers running for cover in fear for their lives, left five people dead and dozens injured.

“After the City wasted hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayer money in its prior failed attempts to complete this project, we stepped in and, at the City’s request (much like Wollman Rink in the 1980s), invested over $30 million of our own money to deliver to the people of the City of New York what has been widely recognized as one of the most magnificent public golf experiences anywhere in the country,”  said a statement from the Trump Organization.

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The city’s law department released the following statement in response to the suit:

“The actions of Mr. Trump to incite a deadly riot at the Capitol on January 6th caused a breach of the Ferry Point contract and we will vigorously defend the City’s decision to terminate the contract. The City properly followed the termination process detailed in the contract and we look forward to selecting a new vendor for Ferry Point that will further the best interests of New Yorkers.”

The suit is expected to be dismissed because the contract the Trump Organization signed with the city’s Department of Parks and Recreation could be terminated “at-will” — though Trump’s company notes that an at-will termination “shall not be arbitrary or capricious.”

Ferry Point is a 222-acre parcel on the southern tip of Bronx County, N.Y. It sits under the northern side of the Whitestone Bridge and includes shoreline along the East River. For decades, it was an open dump, used in the 1960s for household trash and in the ’70s and ’80s as a dumping ground for construction debris. Plans for a capped landfill to include a golf course had circulated in city planning offices since the early 1990s.

A general view at Trump Golf Links Ferry Point. (Mike Pont/WireImage)

“It’s a spectacular piece of land, a major-championship site literally right next to everything, on the city,” Donald Trump told Golfweek in 2012. The course opened in 2015. “It’s important for golf. Golf has been suffering lately, and it’s a major course in the biggest city in the world.”

For such projects, Trump says he doesn’t need to do a detailed cost-benefit analysis. “My feasibility study is my gut,” he said.

Previously, the PGA of America announced in January that Trump Bedminster would no longer host its major championship in 2022. That news came just days after the mob breached the United States Capitol and caused chaos.

“The PGA of America Board of Directors voted tonight to exercise the right to terminate the agreement to play the 2022 PGA Championship at Trump Bedminster,” came a Tweet from Jim Richerson, PGA of America President.

According to Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch, moving the 2022 PGA Championship had been debated internally at the PGA of America for more than two years, but executives had previously been reluctant.

In 2015, the Grand Slam of Golf at Trump National Los Angeles Golf Club was canceled after he made a comment about Mexican immigrants.

 

 

 

Billy Walters, famed sports bettor, granted clemency in final hours of Donald Trump’s presidency

Billy Walters, the famed sports bettor who has been in prison since 2017, received one of the final pardons issued by Donald Trump.

Billy Walters, the famed sports bettor who went to prison in 2017, will be out in time to bet on the Super Bowl thanks to outgoing President Donald Trump.

Walters, 74, received one of the final pardons issued by Trump, as did the brother of Chicago Bears Hall of Fame linebacker Brian Urlacher. Casey Urlacher faced federal charges of recruiting for a multi-million dollar illegal offshore gambling ring.

Walters, by contrast, was known to have placed massive wagers in Las Vegas. He also developed a relationship with golfer Phil Mickelson that coincided with his legal problems.

In 2017, Walters was found guilty of insider trading in a scheme that brought to light his ties to Mickelson, who at one time owed owned $2 million in gambling debts to Walters, according to published reports.

Mickelson avoided criminal charges while Walters was sentenced to five years in prison and fined $10 million – but only after a protracted legal fight.

Walters was released from prison in May 2020 due to the COVID-19 crisis and was serving the rest of his five-year sentence at home. Trump commuted that sentence, meaning that the remainder, a little less than a year, has been wiped out.

According to a White House statement, several individuals sponsored the action on Walters’ behalf, including a handful on the golf industry. That included not only Mickelson but also swing instructor Butch Harmon and TV commentators David Feherty and Peter Jacobsen.

“I am thankful to the President and extremely grateful for the longstanding support of friends and family, especially my wife, Susan,” Walters said in a statement provided to USA TODAY Sports. “I have tried to lead a life marked by concern for others and I hope those qualities, along with the government misconduct that led to my wrongful conviction, convinced the White House to grant me clemency. I also hope this sends a strong message to law enforcement to refrain from illegal misconduct in pursuing their targets. I look forward to vindication as I pursue my civil damages case in federal court.”

Though parts of Walters’ gambling history remain unverified, his exploits allegedly included a 30-year winning streak that included a $2.2 million win in 2007 on USC beating Michigan in football and $3.5 million win in 2009 on Super Bowl XLIV.

In 2014, he told the Wall Street Journal that in a good year he could make up to $60 million betting sports.

On Tuesday he won back his freedom, as one of 144 people to receive last-minute pardons from Trump.

PGA of America to move 2022 PGA Championship from Trump Bedminster

The PGA of America has decided to move the 2022 PGA Championship from Trump Bedminster.

In a column posted on Saturday evening, Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch foresaw the PGA of America making a move regarding its 2022 PGA Championship.

A day later, that prediction became a reality.

At 10:01 p.m. ET Sunday night, the PGA of America announced that Trump Bedminster would no longer be the host of a major championship in 2022. The news comes just days after a mob of President Donald Trump’s supporters broke in and caused chaos at the United States Capitol.

“The PGA of America Board of Directors voted tonight to exercise the right to terminate the agreement to play the 2022 PGA Championship at Trump Bedminster,” came a Tweet from Jim Richerson, PGA of America President.

According to Lynch, moving the 2022 PGA Championship has been debated internally at the PGA of America for more than two years, but executives had previously been reluctant.

This comes less than a week after a woman was shot and killed, and four others died as a pro-Trump mob battled police, broke into the U.S. Capitol and swept through the halls of Congress.

This isn’t the first time the Tour has canceled an event scheduled for a Trump property. In 2015, the Grand Slam of Golf at Trump National Los Angeles Golf Club when he made a comment about Mexican immigrants.

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“We find ourselves in a political situation not of our making,” Seth Waugh, the CEO of the PGA of America, told the Associated Press in a telephone interview. “We’re fiduciaries for our members, for the game, for our mission and for our brand. And how do we best protect that? Our feeling was given the tragic events of Wednesday that we could no longer hold it at Bedminster. The damage could have been irreparable. The only real course of action was to leave.”

A spokesperson for the Trump organization released the following statement on Sunday night:

“We have had a beautiful partnership with the PGA of America and are incredibly disappointed with their decision,” the statement read. “This is a breach of a binding contract and they have no right to terminate the agreement. As an organization we have invested many, many millions of dollars in the 2022 PGA Championship at Trump National Golf Club, Bedminster. We will continue to promote the game of golf on every level and remain focused on operating the finest golf courses anywhere in the world.”

Where is the event headed?

Lynch said during a Sunday night segment on Golf Channel that Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa and Liberty National Golf Club — which is less than 30 minutes from Trump Bedminster — are being considered by PGA of America officials as potential replacements.

Either way, this severs ties with Trump’s golf properties, at least for the foreseeable future. The Senior PGA Championship was held at Trump’s course outside Washington in 2017, and the USGA held the U.S. Women’s Open at Trump Bedminster that year as well.

But no other events are now linked to the Trump Organization’s family of courses, which currently sits at 17, but was expected to increase to 20 in the future.

“This is not because of any pressures we feel. We’re not being forced into a decision,” Waugh told the AP. “We had to make a business decision. It’s a perpetual institution. My job is to hand it off better than when I found it. One hundred years from now, we still want to be vibrant.”

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Lynch: As Donald Trump is driven from the White House, he should find no safe harbor in golf

When historians eventually tally the cost of the Donald Trump era, the manifold indecencies of which culminated in Wednesday’s sacking of the United States Capitol during a failed insurrection, golf will not be counted among its casualties. The game …

When historians eventually tally the cost of the Donald Trump era, the manifold indecencies of which culminated in Wednesday’s sacking of the United States Capitol during a failed insurrection, golf will not be counted among its casualties.

The game will instead be portrayed as Trump’s refuge, something he did while ignoring a pandemic that has claimed 365,000 lives, refusing to acknowledge a resounding electoral defeat, and inciting feeble-minded fascists to violence that left five people dead at the opposite end of Pennsylvania Avenue.

That’s the best case scenario.

The alternative? That a sport which prides itself on values like honesty, integrity and devotion to the rules will be characterized as a welcoming sanctuary for a brazen and amoral insurrectionist, a world in which a racist con man was never discomfited, even while taking a wrecking ball to the constitution and the rule of law.

Like the nation itself, golf has been measurably diminished by Donald Trump’s presence, and not merely in the optics of his choosing to play in times of great crisis and at taxpayer expense (though at least golf limited the damage he might otherwise have inflicted during the hours spent on the course). The damage golf sustained over the last handful of years is trivial by comparison to the country at large, but bears accounting nonetheless.

Two of the sport’s most iconic venues have become untouchable, at least for as long as his name remains above the door. The ‘Blue Monster’ course at Miami’s Doral Resort, which Trump bought in 2012, was home to a PGA Tour event for more than 50 years until the toxicity of his 2016 presidential campaign forced the Tour to relocate the tournament to Mexico City. Turnberry, on Scotland’s Ayrshire coast, is one of the finest venues on the Open Championship rota and has produced some of the most memorable finishes of the last 40-odd years. But the Open has stayed away since he bought it in 2014, and will likely do so for as long as he keeps it out of reach of the bailiffs.

Other major championships have felt his caress and withered. The 2017 U.S. Women’s Open, held at Trump National in Bedminster, New Jersey, was a painful spectacle as most players tried to ignore the groping elephant in the room. His Bedminster course is scheduled to host the 2022 PGA Championship, a fact that now has the PGA of America bunkered down under sustained criticism for a decision made in 2014. Such are the perils of assigning championship venues far in advance; you just never know when you’ve hitched your premier event to a sociopath. Though there was a hint back in 2015, when the PGA of America chose to kill the Grand Slam of Golf rather than play it at Trump’s Los Angeles course in the wake of his racist comments about Mexicans.

Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster
Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey. Photo by Seth Wenig/Associated Press

The odds that ’22’s PGA Championship will happen as scheduled in New Jersey are about as good as the chances of you or I winning it. Seth Waugh, the PGA of America’s CEO, was a banker and has an alert eye for high-risk exposure. He knows that Trumpism is likely to be an equally incendiary force in the ’22 midterm elections and that any affiliation is poisonous. Waugh will be forced to move the event and face down a small but vocal faction of his membership who remain true believers. Moving its major from Trump National has been debated internally at the PGA for more than two years, but executives have been reluctant to antagonize a famously vindictive man who controls the Internal Revenue Service. Such concerns melt away in 10 days, if not sooner.

Reputations too have been left bruised in the eyes of many golf fans. Like those of Jack Nicklaus and Nancy Lopez, both of whom have long been celebrated for their character and rectitude. Both supported Trump in the waning days of the election campaign, despite clear signs he would not accept any result he didn’t like. Nicklaus and Lopez have a right to support whatever candidate they choose, but they are not exempt from scrutiny for a choice publicly stated. In the aftermath of Wednesday’s murderous riot in Washington, D.C., Lopez at least tweeted that she disagreed with Trump and was rooting for the country to unite under President Biden. Jack has remained silent as a sphinx.

Arguably even more sullied are the reputations of Gary Player and Annika Sorenstam, who attended the White House to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom from the man who just one day earlier had incited the mob that killed a police officer. In an ideal world, the accomplishments for which Player and Sorenstam were being recognized with one of the nation’s highest civilian honors could be viewed independently of the administration conferring the honor, but like so many other norms that standard has been laid waste by Trump. Neither Player nor Sorenstam released photos from the ceremony. At least the third professional golfer “honored,” Babe Zaharias, doesn’t have to live with the shame, having died more than 60 years ago.

Bryson DeChambeau had shed the Trump Golf logo from his golf bag when he competed this week at the Sentry Tournament of Champions in Hawaii. Time will tell if others—like PGA Tour Champions regulars Rocco Mediate and Scott McCarron—do the same.

The notion that an association with the outgoing president might be cause for shame will trigger Trumpers in golf, who are accustomed to justifying his obscenities with whataboutery and conspiracy theories, who foam at the mouth when confronted with views alien to their echo chamber, and who can no longer distinguish the conservatism of old from the cult of today. They passionately (and rightly) celebrate Folds of Honor veterans yet defend Cadet Bone Spurs’ many calumnies against the military and their families. They mock (rightly) Bill Clinton’s audacious score-keeping, but turn a deaf ear when Trump demands officials “find” enough votes to flip a legitimate election in his favor. Golf no more belongs to that hypocritical cadre than does America itself.

Whatever the future holds for Donald Trump after the noon hour on January 20, the events of January 6 that left five people dead ought to make him a pariah everywhere. Including in golf. This game should not be the familiar bosom to which he can safely retreat while fending off indictments. He is finally and deservedly being expelled from civic life. He needs to be driven from golf, too.

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Opinion: Annika Sorenstam, Gary Player shame golf by accepting Presidential Medal of Freedom from Donald Trump

Columnist Christine Brennan on how Annika Sorenstam and Gary Player accepting the Medal of Freedom from President Trump shames golf.

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump encouraged his supporters to never accept defeat, then watched as hundreds of them stormed the U.S. Capitol and rampaged through the halls of Congress, later saying, “We love you, you’re very special” to those involved in the deadly and appalling attack.

On Thursday, Hall of Fame golfers Annika Sorenstam and Gary Player stood with Trump at the White House to accept the Presidential Medal of Freedom. They likely were the first outsiders to be with Trump at the White House since the reprehensible violence just 16 blocks away.

Sorenstam and Player, widely regarded as paragons of sportsmanship and honor in their game, did not cancel on Trump. They did not note the horror that had taken place on his watch and decide that Thursday wasn’t an appropriate time to celebrate with him at the White House. They did not care about the gravity of the situation, about the calls from political leaders to remove Trump by impeachment or the 25th Amendment.

No. They willingly chose to accept an award from Trump and be seen with him a day after his words and actions launched one of the most shameful incidents in U.S. history.

There will be those who say Sorenstam, who was born in Sweden, and Player, from South Africa, can choose to accept an award from Trump whenever they wish. That is true. What’s more, Sorenstam was an ardent supporter of Trump’s failed re-election bid, retweeting Jack Nicklaus’ multi-paragraph endorsement of Trump in the days before the 2020 election.

But Sorenstam and Player don’t just represent themselves. They represent all of golf, a mostly lily-white sport that has struggled for decades, to its continuing detriment, to attract women and people of color – just as Trump, a creature of the game, has denigrated those very same people.

SON KNOWS BEST: Gary Player’s son thinks father should decline Presidential Medal of Freedom

As representatives of their game, and as business people who benefit greatly from it, their reputations are sullied, forever. Sorenstam and Player now will be attached to Trump at this horrible time in our nation’s history, forever. They will be known as the people who had the chance to gracefully suggest another day might be better to celebrate golfers in this nation – golfers, for heaven’s sake – and they refused to do so.

They had nothing to do with the insurrection of the Trump mob on Wednesday, of course, but they happily became Trump’s Thursday accessories. They celebrated with him as our nation mourns what he has wrought.

A third golfer, the late Babe Didrikson Zaharias, also was honored by Trump. This is just a guess, but it’s hard to believe the strong, legendary, groundbreaking Babe would have allowed herself to have anything to do with that awful man.

While Player, 85, who once supported his nation’s racist policy of apartheid before later denouncing it, is an understandable Trump ally, Sorenstam’s involvement with Trump is perplexing. She is one of the greatest women to ever play the game. Now 50, Sorenstam is known as a trailblazer for playing in a men’s PGA Tour event, the Colonial, in 2003, enduring sexist taunts from a couple of male players while drawing huge crowds and acquitting herself quite well before missing the cut.

When she retweeted Nicklaus’ endorsement of Trump, I texted her a question:

“How do you reconcile Trump’s awful record on women – bragging and joking about sexually assaulting women (“Access Hollywood” tape), calling the Democratic VP nominee a ‘monster,’ being accused of sexual assault or sexual harassment by at least 26 women, etc. – while being a woman who has forged an amazing career around the issues of inclusion for women and treating women equally and fairly and with respect?”

She never replied. On Thursday afternoon, I texted again, this time to say I’d like to talk to her about accepting the Medal of Freedom a day after the awful rampage of Trump supporters at the Capitol. She did not reply.

It turns out that the ceremony for Sorenstam and Player was not open to the press. There were no photos immediately available. The event was basically held in secret.

Actually, it was held in shame.

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