Caddying is now a profession. This one began a program to coach for it


Xander Schauffele with his close friend and caddie, Austin Kaiser.

Caddies for prime Tour professionals play priceless roles and are paid accordingly.

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Some 50 years in the past, lengthy earlier than he labored for the likes of Curtis Unusual, Greg Norman and Payne Stewart, Mike Hicks landed his first job as a caddie, carrying for a neighborhood pastor at his hometown membership in North Carolina. Hicks was 12. His pay was $5 per loop.

In these days, caddying barely counted as a viable profession. With uncommon exceptions, it was checked out as a stopgap for these missing higher choices, or a summer season gig for the Danny Noonans of the world. Hicks didn’t see it as a strategy to make a dwelling.

“I by no means even entertained the thought,” he says. 

In 1980, although, as an undergraduate at North Carolina State, Hicks was contemplating taking a semester off when a buddy who caddied for the Tour professional J.C. Snead inspired him to affix him in California and tag alongside on the West Coast swing.

“He stated, ‘You’ll be able to work the pro-ams, and a few Monday qualifiers. You’ll get by,’” Hicks says. 

Hicks left house with $140 and returned eight weeks later having had a blast and doubled his cash. He was 19. There was no trying again.

For Hicks, it was the beginning of a decades-long run as a revered Tour looper (a picture of Hicks leaping into Stewart’s arms after his boss clinched the ’99 U.S. Open is a part of the sport’s iconography). He’s 63 now, lately retired from the circuit. And the commerce he practiced has been totally reworked.

Mike Hicks celebrates with Payne Stewart at the 1999 U.S. Open.
In 1999, Hicks was a part of considered one of golf’s most well-known player-caddie celebrations.

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Caddying today does greater than pay the payments. At high-end golf equipment and resorts, loopers routinely earn six-figure incomes. Caddies for prime Tour professionals are multimillionaires. The job has been professionalized. What’s usually lacking, although, is formalized skilled coaching.

That’s one thing Hicks is making an attempt to alter.

A founding member of the Tour Caddie Collective, a community dedicated to growing the following era of caddies, Hicks has teamed up along with his fellow Tour loopers Grant Berry and Heath Holt to launch the Skilled Caddie Certification Program. Operated together with North Carolina State College’s Workplace of Skilled Growth, this system goals to supply 18 individuals seven days and one night time of intensive instruction masking each facet of the job. The inaugural session begins Dec. 1.

“We’re going to be moving into all of the nuances,” Hicks says.

Within the cliche development, caddying has three fundamental necessities: Present up, sustain and shut up.

That now not applies.

For starters, Hicks says, “It’s the alternative of ‘shut up.” At elite ranges, anyway, most gamers count on open communication, some extent underscored each time the TV networks listen in on Michael Greller and Jordan Spieth. From one partnership to a different, and from one shot to the following, a caddie’s position can morph from sidekick to psychologist to bodyguard, and past. Quantitative abilities are more and more important. So is emotional intelligence. 

“A player-caddie relationship is sort of a marriage,” Hicks says. “However you additionally must be a mathematician. You’re not simply including and subtracting. You’re coping with percentages. You’re analyzing stats and utilizing reside information to assist guys with course administration.”

To assist individuals put together for these wide-ranging calls for, Hicks says this system will likely be taught by an array of instructors, together with a sports activities psychologist, a physiotherapist, a PGA Tour official and specialists in such know-how as Trackman, Aimpoint and GC Quad.

There’ll even be a category in CPR.

“You inform me what number of caddies on the market know CPR,” Hicks says. “Hardly any, I’ll let you know that.”

At the same time as they care for his or her gamers, Hicks says, caddies have to be taught to take care of themselves.

“Stretching is an important a part of caddying,” Hicks says. “It’s essential to eat properly, and get correct relaxation.”

On these fronts, Hicks concedes, he fell quick in his profession. 

“It’s just about a miracle that I’m nonetheless right here,” he says. 

However time is a superb trainer, and he now has an opportunity to share what he’s discovered with others. Although the plan is to make this system commonly recurring, a long-term schedule hasn’t but been set. A second session is tentatively slated for February. However December’s inaugural session, Hicks says, is “a pilot” that he expects will evolve over time. The price is $4,000 per participant. 

“We wish to get it going,” he says. “And we’ll see the place it leads.”

For extra info, go.ncsu.edu/golf-caddie-cert or contact data@tourcaddiecollective.com.

Josh Sens

A golf, meals and journey author, Josh Sens has been a GOLF Journal contributor since 2004 and now contributes throughout all of GOLF’s platforms. His work has been anthologized in The Greatest American Sportswriting. He’s additionally the co-author, with Sammy Hagar, of Are We Having Any Enjoyable But: the Cooking and Partying Handbook.

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