
Trump's Turnberry course is 'worthy' of hosting the British Open, says DeChambeau
Now the two-time major champion is doing some British Open campaigning for him.
DeChambeau, one of golf's biggest names, said on Friday he was all for Trump's Turnberry course in Scotland hosting an Open Championship for the first time since 2009.
'I look at it as a golf course,' DeChambeau said of the stunning links venue along the Ayrshire coast. 'It's one of the best golf courses in the world, and I'd love for it to be a part of the rotation.
'Albeit I haven't played it, I've heard so many great things about it, and anytime you get to play a special historical golf course like that, I think it's worthy of it, for sure.'
Turnberry is still on the R&A's 10-venue British Open rotation but isn't playing an active role. It last hosted the Open 16 years ago — before Trump bought the resort — when a 59-year-old Tom Watson made bogey on the 72nd hole and wound up losing a playoff to Stewart Cink.
Speaking ahead of the Open being played this week at Royal Portrush, R&A chief executive Mark Darbon said transportation and other issues had to be addressed before Turnberry got its hands on the oldest major championship again.
Darbon said the R&A met with Eric Trump and other leaders of Trump Golf a few months ago regarding the 'big logistical challenges' facing Turnberry, and that the talks had been constructive.
DeChambeau believes Trump would make Turnberry a special Open venue.
'He'd still probably respect the R&A and what they're trying to accomplish,' DeChambeau said. 'I can't speak on his behalf, but what I can say is knowing him, he'll do his best of a job as he possibly can.'
DeChambeau's relationship with Trump is such that he joined him on stage at an election party in Florida in November before Trump was declared president again.
DeChambeau also had a round of golf with Trump and some short-game practice on the South Lawn of the White House a few months ago.
So what of his audience with Trump around this time last year, when they attempted to break 50 off the forward tees at the president's Bedminster Golf Club in New Jersey using the scramble format? It went on YouTube and was a huge success.
'Got like 15 million views or something,' DeChambeau said. 'It was fun.'
DeChambeau was speaking after shooting 6-under 65 in the second round of the Open at Royal Portrush in a bid to make the cut, having opened with a 78.
___
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
a few seconds ago
- New York Times
Rory McIlroy has a chance at this Open Championship. All of Northern Ireland is behind him
PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland — Rory McIlroy's walk up the 18th hole at Royal Portrush six years ago was the cruelest of sneak previews. A chance to see what it might look like, what it might feel like. The crowd surrounding the final green during the second round of the 2019 Open Championship welcomed the then 30-year-old with an applause that only your own can produce. At times that week, it seemed as if the waves of bodies covering Portrush wanted their native son to win just as much, or more, than he wanted a win. In the end, they greeted him like a champion. Advertisement McIlroy finished that Friday with a lip-biting tip of the cap and a 6-under 65, what he would call one of the greatest rounds of his life. When the noise finally settled, though, the damage remained done. The wreckage of an opening 79 was too much to overcome and the Open would go on without him. All that was left was wondering what if he'd made that walk on Sunday, his hat in the air, history in hand. 'It's a moment I envisaged for the last few years,' McIlroy said that Friday of the scene on 18, 'it just happened two days early.' Now the new version. McIlroy was back here on Friday, back on the 18th fairway, back on the long walk among those who want everything for him. This time, he got what he wanted, and they got what they wanted. A chance. Despite a wayward driver, McIlroy made it through the first and second rounds of this Open still intact, this time at 3-under for the tournament and seven shots off the lead heading into the weekend. He remains — despite Scottie Scheffler charging atop the leaderboard, and Matt Fitzpatrick threatening to become the first Englishman to claim the Claret Jug in 33 years, and 2023 Open champion Brian Harman jumping into the mix — the central character of this tournament. All it'll take is two great rounds from a player who set the Royal Portrush scoring record with a 61 as a 16-year-old in 2005, and set it again after the course's 2015 renovation with his 65 in 2019. 'I didn't have this opportunity six years ago, so to play an extra two days in this atmosphere in front of these crowds, I'm very excited for that,' McIlroy said Friday. 'I feel like my game's definitely good enough to make a run.' Perhaps McIlroy will follow his Masters win with a Hollywood — er, Holywood — weekend, turning 2025 into a career-defining season, cementing his case as the greatest European player of all time. Maybe he won't. All we know for sure is Friday's second round proved that it's possible and that this country is pulsing with hope. McIlroy survived an uneven front nine Friday with birdies on No. 1 and No. 4 offsetting a pair of bogeys. On the par-five second, after blocking his driver in the general direction of Glenariffe, he opted to take an unplayable drop out of a mess of tall grass. McIlroy took the one-stroke penalty, blasted a second shot back into play, and salvaged a par. Advertisement As it went in Thursday's opening-round 1-under 70, McIlroy was playing well enough Friday to avoid 2019's washout, but not enough to push forward. Then came the par-5 12th. Finally, a fairway and a green with no issue, followed by a near-miss eagle putt, and a tap-in birdie. Something resembling momentum. A whole pint of it for the crowd. Two holes later, on the 14th, playing partners Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Thomas both hit 3-wood down a narrow fairway and were rewarded with trouble. Fleetwood in the left rough. Thomas in a right bunker. McIlroy? He took driver, sending a 375-yard lash 80 yards past his mates. The tee shot rolled 40 yards past the crosswalk and left McIlroy with a nippy 97-yard wedge shot into the 470-yard par-4. A birdie. More momentum. McIlroy arrived at Portrush's closing stretch with the skies turning glower and winds growing stronger. He narrowly missed birdie on the devilish par-3 16th and followed with a par on 17. By the time McIlroy arrived on 18, the skies couldn't hold back any longer. The driving rain might've sent some fans filing out of the grandstands surrounding the final green, but not with McIlroy coming. They waited, along with McIlroy, as Fleetwood embarked on a search and rescue mission to locate a tee shot gone awry, creating a long delay. McIlroy stood under an umbrella and you had to wonder. Any flashbacks to those final feelings six years ago? Did he feel the poetic symmetry so obvious to everyone else? As far as emotions go, this week has mirrored that of the 2019 Open. Every gallery is stacked 20 rows deep. Constant shouts of 'GOOO ROR-RY!!' and 'COME-MON ROR-RY!!' Everywhere, always. Fans wave at McIlroy as if he's passing by in a motorcade, not a threesome. Kids hold up handmade signs for him, earning more camera time than many names on the leaderboard. It can often feel like everyone is playing one tournament and McIlroy is playing another. They're playing one hole after another. McIlroy is in the midst of 72 Game 7s. On the 12th tee Friday, McIlroy studied his ball and waggled his driver as Harris English, from the 11th fairway, struck an iron 4 feet from the pin — one of the best approach shots of the day — and only 20 or 30 yards away from 12 tee. McIlroy didn't need to back away from his shot because there was no reason to. No one cheered for English's shot. They were all staring at Rory. Advertisement This has been the entirety of the weekend. So what might the weekend possibly be like? Few, if any, can understand such a fatal tension. Fleetwood has at least tasted it. Raised in Southport, England, about 20 miles from Royal Liverpool, he played the 2023 Open on a course he grew up dreaming about, in front of a crowd of friends and neighbors, and felt every heartbeat. 'Every great moment is amplified,' Fleetwood said Friday, after a 3-under 68 to move to 1 under for the week. 'But it also comes with its own sort of things that you have to manage. How much everyone else wants it for you. That's not easy. Like, they're all there for you. They want it for you and they're supporting you.' Take that, now add McIlroy maybe being Northern Ireland's greatest-ever sportsman, and him coming off completing the career Grand Slam only three months ago, and him wrestling the ghosts of 2019. We can't know for sure what McIlroy was thinking from the long view down the 18th fairway Friday, but he was on his way to another walk to remember. A mosaic of umbrellas surrounded the 18th this time. The roars sounded the same, but were different. This wasn't goodbye.


Fox News
a few seconds ago
- Fox News
Prominent liberals and media figures declare cuts to PBS, NPR a ‘perilous moment'
Liberal commentators, lawmakers and journalists working for PBS and NPR blasted this week's congressional vote that stripped federal funding from their outlets. Following the Senate, the House of Representatives voted 216 to 213 to pass President Donald Trump's $9 billion rescissions package late Thursday night. When signed by Trump, it will block $8 billion in funding to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and $1 billion to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting – which funds PBS and NPR – for the remainder of the fiscal year. PBS NewsHour co-anchor Geoff Bennett reacted to the vote on X, stating, "This is a perilous moment for public media — but the resolve is stronger than ever. If you value independent journalism, educational programming, and trusted local coverage, please support your local PBS or NPR station." Other liberals weighed in on the bill's passage. Former U.S. Secretary of Labor Robert Reich posted a reaction to the vote on X. "The Senate just passed Trump's request to cut $1.1 billion in federal funding for public broadcasting. Why is Trump so hell-bent on gutting funds for PBS and NPR? It's part of a larger plan — one where he can control not just what we do, but what we think," he wrote. Additionally, Reich's post featured a video of him explaining to Sesame Street character Elmo how Trump is cutting funds to PBS in order to control information throughout the country. "And Trump, like past authoritarians, wants to control not just what we do, but also how we think," he said in the video. Liberal commentator Molly Jong-Fast declared, "This is so bad." Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., called it the "meanest" vote in Senate history, while fellow Democratic lawmaker Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., reacted to the vote on X, stating, "The Trump administration and Republicans in Congress have weaponized the rescissions tool to defund their perceived political enemies – public radio, Sesame Street, and starving children overseas. This vote was a test case for the months ahead." NPR critic-at-large Eric Deggans posted, "Tough news. But we'll still keep on doing the work, fairly and accurately." Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., posted, "House Republicans just passed Trump's rescissions package — billions of dollars in cuts to public broadcasting that serves rural America and global aid that saves lives. I voted HELL NO." Jayapal also shared her full statement on the vote, which declared, "Simply put, Republicans are stealing from the American people. And yet once again, Republicans are pathetically lining up behind Trump to do whatever he says rather than acting in the best interests of the people they represent."


Fox News
a few seconds ago
- Fox News
Sen. Slotkin says Harris' fatal flaw was lack of focus, prioritizing 'everything' and therefore 'nothing'
As Democrats reel from their November loss to President Donald Trump, Michigan Sen. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., called out former Vice President Kamala Harris for failing to win over the electorate. New York Times political reporter Katie Glueck spoke to Slotkin in an interview this week headlined, "Elissa Slotkin Wants Democrats to Reclaim Their 'Alpha Energy.'" "In your recent economic speech, you argued that some Democrats conflate large multinational corporations with small businesses, making it seem to many Americans as if Democrats are anti-business or are vilifying success," Glueck noted, before asking, "But the Harris campaign explicitly emphasized support for small businesses. Why did that effort fail?" "Kamala Harris had a very short time to formulate her campaign. But I don't think I can say with a straight face that the Michigan public felt her main agenda was support for small businesses," Slotkin replied. "Democrats were saying we were for everything, that everything was a priority, everything was important," the senator added. "And so the American public couldn't understand what we really prioritized and cared about. Donald Trump, whether you believe him or not, prioritized the talking point of cost of living and the economy." She concluded, "Democrats have policy plans on their websites about good things that they support. I still think we have good ideas. But when you prioritize everything, you actually prioritize nothing." This is not the first time Slotkin has called out leadership of the Democratic Party after the election. At the same time however, she herself has been put in the spotlight for vague policy rhetoric. She made headlines in April for a speech where she called out her own party as "weak and woke" and urged them to "f---ing retake the flag" as she prepares a "war plan" to defeat Trump and the Republican agenda. However, some have challenged such reformers to specify what progressive cultural policies they will leave behind in order to win back moderates. Fox News Digital reached out to Harris' office and received no immediate reply.