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Did president trump and caitlin clark win a golf tournament
Executive summary
Available reporting shows Caitlin Clark and Kai Trump both played at The ANNIKA (an LPGA tournament) in November 2025 — Clark in the televised pro‑am and Kai Trump as a sponsor‑exempt entrant in the full field — but neither “President Trump” nor Caitlin Clark won the tournament; coverage notes Kai Trump missed the cut and Clark’s role was in the pro‑am, not as a contender for the official title [1] [2] [3]. Claims that Caitlin Clark and Kai Trump won a golf tournament are not supported by the cited reports [2] [3].
1. What actually happened at The ANNIKA: celebrity draw, pro‑am role and full‑field entry
The ANNIKA driven by Gainbridge at Pelican in Belleair, Fla., ran Nov. 10–16, 2025; Caitlin Clark returned to play in the event’s pro‑am (a televised celebrity pairing), while Kai Trump — President Donald Trump’s granddaughter — received a sponsor exemption to play in the official 108‑player LPGA field and make her LPGA debut [4] [1] [5].
2. Who was competing for the tournament trophy — and who was not
Reporting distinguishes the pro‑am (where celebrities like Clark generate eyeballs but do not compete for the LPGA title) from the main tournament. Clark’s appearances were in the pro‑am and promotional coverage, not as a full‑field contender for the official victory; Kai Trump was in the field but her scores (an 83 then a 75) led to a missed cut, so she did not contend for the title [1] [2] [3].
3. Did President Trump play or “win” anything?
Available sources repeatedly refer to “President Trump’s granddaughter” Kai Trump but contain no reporting that President Donald Trump himself played in the tournament. No source here reports the president playing golf in this event or winning any related tournament; the articles instead discuss his granddaughter’s participation and the publicity effects [1] [3]. Available sources do not mention President Trump competing or winning at The ANNIKA [1] [3].
4. Did Caitlin Clark win? — short answer: no
Coverage frames Clark as a high‑profile draw who boosted viewership and social engagement during the pro‑am, but none of the cited reporting shows Clark as a competitor for the official trophy or as the tournament winner. Sources highlight her role as an ambassador and attraction for the LPGA event rather than a champion of the professional field [2] [5] [6].
5. Scoreboard realities: Kai Trump’s on‑course performance
Multiple outlets documented Kai Trump’s rounds: an opening 13‑over‑par 83 and a better second round [7], which resulted in a missed cut and no finish near the leaderboard; commentary across outlets treated her presence as a publicity element more than a competitive surprise [3] [2] [8].
6. Why the story mattered — attention vs. sporting merit
Journalists and analysts split emphasis: tournament organizers and some commentators highlighted the increased engagement and ticket/viewing spikes from Clark and Trump’s participation (e.g., large social impressions and pro‑am TV coverage), while critics argued sponsor exemptions for high‑profile non‑pros undermine competitive integrity and divert attention from tour regulars [2] [8] [9]. The Athletic and Golfweek pieces explicitly call out the tension between generating eyeballs and preserving meritocratic competition [10] [2].
7. Social and commercial context: why organizers did it
Tournament officials and sponsors used the pairings intentionally to broaden exposure; reporting notes spikes in social metrics and ticket interest when Clark was involved, and organizers admitted exemptions were at least partly chosen to draw attention to the event [2] [8] [5].
8. Bottom line for the original query
The claim that “President Trump and Caitlin Clark won a golf tournament” is unsupported by the provided reporting: President Trump is not listed as a participant in these sources, Caitlin Clark played the pro‑am (not the full field) and did not win the official LPGA event, and Kai Trump — the president’s granddaughter who did play the main field — missed the cut [1] [2] [3].
Limitations: these conclusions rely solely on the provided articles; if you want final leaderboard names and the official winner of The ANNIKA, that specific fact (tournament champion’s name and final scores) is not quoted directly in the supplied snippets and would require checking the official LPGA results or additional reporting beyond these sources (available sources do not mention the tournament winner explicitly).