NEW YORK — The Ryder Cup is bracing itself for T-Day, the moment Donald Trump and the presidential entourage bear down on Bethpage like Ceasar returning to Rome. Frankly, the event and the law enforcement agencies could probably do without it.

From the sporting perspective, having Trump in your corner is not necessarily a good thing for the home team. He was booed a fortnight ago at the US Open tennis just down the road in Flushing Meadows for the disturbance he brought, forcing many to miss the start of the men’s singles final.

And on the other side of Manhattan in New Jersey he was an embarrassment at football’s Club World Cup in July, inserting himself into the middle of the celebrations, John Terry-like , after presenting the winner’s trophy to Chelsea.

At least both those spaces

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