DONALD Trump has responded to Rory McIlroy’s vow to never play golf with the US President again after his response to the Covid-19 crisis, saying some professional golfers liked his policies and others did not.

Trump commented while phoning in to TV coverage as McIlroy and three other golfers competed in the TaylorMade Driving Relief skins tournament in Florida on Sunday, which raised more than five million dollars for coronavirus charities.

McIlroy caused controversy last Thursday by saying while he had played with the golf-loving Trump in the past and enjoyed it, he would not play with the president again due to his politicising of the coronavirus pandemic.

“We’re in the midst of something that’s pretty serious right now and the fact that he’s trying to politicise it and make it a campaign rally and say we’re administering the most tests in (the) world like it is a contest - there’s something that just is terrible,” the Northern Irishman said on the McKellar Golf podcast.

“It’s not the way a leader should act.

“I don’t know if he’d want to play with me again after what I just said, but I wouldn’t (play with him again).”

Trump, alleged to habitually cheat at golf in the 2019 book Commander In Cheat by former Sports Illustrated columnist Rick Reilly, phoned in to NBC’s coverage of the skins event on Sunday.

Asked about McIlroy’s comments, he said: “A lot of them (golfers) are very political, actually. A lot of them like my politics very much and some don’t, I guess.

“The ones that don’t I don’t get to see as much.”

World number one McIlroy teamed up with Dustin Johnson against Rickie Fowler and Matthew Wolff in Sunday’s charity event at Seminole Golf Club.

McIlroy and Johnson won by claiming a 1.1 million dollar (£910,000) skin through a nearest-the-pin challenge on a par-three tiebreaker hole, as McIlroy hit his tee shot to within 10 feet.

The pair raised 2,075,000 dollars (£1.53m), Fowler and Wolff ended with 1,150,000 dollars (£951,000). Adding in viewer donations, the event raised 5,503,959 dollars (£4.55m).

Trump also said it was “wonderful” to be watching the likes of McIlroy playing golf again as the US President underlined the importance of getting sport back quickly for the “psyche” of the nation.

The sporting calendar has been thrown into disarray by the coronavirus pandemic in recent months, but events are slowly beginning to return across the world.

“It’s a wonderful thing to see,” Trump told NBC of the return of competitive golf. “I’m getting a little tired watching 10-year-old golf tournaments where you know who won.”