Donald Trump paid a Sunday visit to his Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Fla., on Dec. 10 to play golf. The visit marked the 82nd time the 45th President has visited one of his 17 golf clubs (and, for most of them, presumably played some golf) since becoming President on Jan. 20, 2017. This is his 83rd visit to any golf course as President.

Trump arrived at the golf club at 10 a.m., after a 10-minute drive from his Mar-a-Lago private club, per the White House press pool reporters. This marks the only round of golf Trump has played this weekend, coming off a Friday rally in Pensacola, Fla., which amounted to geographic semantics around a rally for embattled Alabama senatorial candidate Roy Moore. Trump also attended the Saturday opening of a civil rights museum in Mississippi.

While the White House typically doesn't indicate who Trump plays with, the administration acknowledged Trump played golf with South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham, who has become a common playing partner of late.

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All but one round of golf has been at his clubs, playing once in Japan in Nov. 2017 with Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe and Japanese star pro Hideki Matsuyama.

So far, Trump has been on the golf course or his clubs during some portion of the day for 26.2 percent of his presidency. With 10 weekends between now and the end of 2017, it's conceivable Trump could fit in 100 days at his golf properties before year-end.

The Trump Administration, per typical policy, does not acknowledge that Trump is playing even a hole of golf, much less an 18-hole round. However, if he's going to the golf club for about 4-5 hours, you can be pretty sure he's playing golf. Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden has asked the White House to provide the names of Trump's golf partners, as well for his clubs to provide visitor logs to get a sense of when Trump has played golf and with whom.

The President is certainly entitled to some leisure time, and golf has been an outlet for most Commanders-in-Chief dating back to the early 20th century. However, the reluctance to even acknowledge that this President plays golf conflicts with his almost relentless criticism of his predecessor, Barack Obama, who played an estimated 333 rounds of golf as President.