Why Obama loves golf, basketball and all things athletic
1. Why Obama loves golf, basketball and all things athletic
President Obama talks to reporters as he plays golf with Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razzak at
Marine Corps Base Hawaii on December 24, 2014.
NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images
HONOLULU - After nearly a week of vacation in Hawaii, the president's scorecard looks like this:
four rounds of golf, three visits to the gym, a trip to the bowling alley and a hike through the wilds of
Oahu.
It's a fairly typical Hawaiian presidential getaway, filled with athletic pursuits for a relentlessly
competitive commander in chief in search of a worthy adversary.
He's the candidate who made basketball as much a part of his 2008 campaign as hope and change,
finding time for pick-up hoops on primary election days. Playing ball was good luck, he said at the
time. The White House tennis court became the White House basketball court when the Obamas
moved in.
But the president himself admits time has caught up with his 6-foot, 1-inch, 53-year-old body. He's
more cautious than he was even as a first-term president, fearing injury and a prolonged recovery.
Golf has overtaken basketball as his preferred recreational pursuit and there hasn't been an
announced presidential basketball game in more than a year.
"Man, my jump shot is broke," the president said just before the November midterm elections. "I've
been working too hard. I've got to get back in the gym."
A White House aide said golf gives the president a taste of competition and athleticism without
basketball's injury risks. Above all it provides a sense of freedom for Mr. Obama, who has bemoaned
the confines of the office. Aside from the golf course, there's no other open space where he can walk
around freely, said the aide, who requested anonymity so he could speak candidly.
The president tends to play golf with White House staff, friends, donors and celebrities. Rarely are
elected officials invited to join the first foursome, but Sens. Saxby Chambliss, R-Georgia, Bob
Corker, R-Tennessee, and Mark Udall, D-Colorado, played with the president last year at Joint Base
Andrews.
Chambliss, who rode in Mr. Obama's cart, said they played Republicans versus Democrats and was
quick to add that the Republicans won. "[Mr. Obama] struggled that day," Chambliss said in a phone
interview. "He had some good shots and some not-so-good shots. He had a bad duck hook and he
couldn't stop it. I could sympathize as someone who's been there before."
Chambliss estimated the president was a 16 handicap. By comparison, Udall and Corker were
ranked by Golf Digest magazine as the top two golfing elected officials. Their handicaps hovered
around 2 when the rankings were published in 2011.
On the golf course, Chambliss said they talked a bit of business (cybersecurity, foreign policy) but
most of the conversation was casual chatter about the round and each other's families. The senator
said he appreciated the president's bipartisan outreach and that the shared experience was good for
2. their working relationship.
"It does help soften things," he said.
Chambliss, it should be noted, scored a hole-in-one on one of the par-3s.
"He always reminds me of that when I see him. He says, 'it's my turn to have the next one,'"
Chambliss said of Mr. Obama.
Chambliss isn't the only one who has commented on the best search sites president's questionable
golf talents. In an interview earlier this year, Michael Jordan said the president, was a "hack" on the
green.
"I never said he wasn't a great politician, I just said he was a [expletive] golfer," Jordan said.
Mr. Obama responded to the diss in his own interview about a week later, saying, "There is no doubt
that Michael is a better golfer than I am. Of course if I was playing twice a day for the last 15 years,
then that might not be the case."
Since taking office, President Obama has played 210 rounds of golf, according to CBS News's Mark
Knoller. Monday's bowling outing with friends and staff was only the second time he's bowled
outside the White House as president. He's also gone fishing once and played tennis twice over the
last 6 years.
Current and former White House staffers describe the president as someone who is at the high end
of average for a sports fan. He knows how his Chicago Bears fared on Sunday and can talk about
some the game's nuances, one former official recalled, but he's not someone who pores over
advanced statistical metrics like a fantasy football wonk.
Recently, the president told a radio host that aside from the Super Bowl or the NBA Finals, he rarely
watches full games. He gets sports news by watching SportsCenter on ESPN while exercising most
mornings.
"I get so much politics I don't want to be inundated http://www.golfnow.com/course-directory with a
bunch of chatter about politics during the day," the president said.
During lulls in his schedule, sports is his preferred topic of conversation, aides said, and aboard Air
Force One, spades is the card game of choice.