Singer Williams points into the crowd at a campaign rally with U.S. Republican presidential nominee McCain in Columbus
Singer Hank Williams Jr. points into the crowd at a campaign rally with U.S. Republican presidential nominee Senator John McCain (R-AZ) in Columbus, Ohio October 31, 2008. Senator McCain is on a two-day campaign bus tour through the state of Ohio. Reuters

ESPN pulled Hank Williams Jr.'s theme song from its Monday Night Football broadcast in a rebuke to the country music star for comments earlier in the day comparing President Barack Obama to Adolf Hitler.

Williams, a Republican, had appeared on a Fox News' morning television show FOX and Friends on Monday, and was asked which of his party's presidential candidates he liked.

Nobody, he answered and then offered unprompted commentary on Obama's golf game this summer with House Speaker John Boehner. He called it a political mistake because it turned a lot of people off.

Obama and Boehner played side by side that day against Vice President Joe Biden and Republican Ohio Governor John Kasich at the height of the congressional budget debate.

Asked what he did not like about the friendly bipartisan golf match, Williams replied, Come on! It'd be like Hitler playing golf with (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu.

They're the enemy! Obama! And Biden! he added.

The network, which is owned by the Walt Disney Co, responded on Monday by yanking Williams' familiar MNF theme, All My Rowdy Friends, adapted from his 1984 hit song All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight, from the introduction of the broadcast.

The song has opened Monday Night Football on both ABC and ESPN since 1991.

While Hank Williams Jr. is not an ESPN employee, we recognize that he is closely linked to our company through the open to 'Monday Night Football,' the sports channel said in a statement.

We are extremely disappointed with his comments and as a result we have decided to pull the open from tonight's telecast, the statement said.

A spokesman for Bristol, Connecticut-based ESPN said it had not decided whether the action would be permanent.

Williams, 62, later issued a statement acknowledging that his analogy was extreme but was intended to make a point.

I was simply trying to explain how stupid it seemed to me -- how ludicrous that pairing was, he said. They're polar opposites and it made no sense. They don't see eye-to-eye and never will. I have always respected the office of the president.

He added, When both sides are high-fiving it on the ninth hole, when everybody else is without a job -- it just makes a whole lot of us angry.

According to media reports, the team of Obama and Boehner beat Biden and Kasich at the summer golf matchup.