One Membership. Four Times the Value.

InsideGOLF Premium
Fitness

Want to caddie? Here are 5 workout tips to get you in shape

caddies walk with bags on their shoulders during the 2004 masters

If you want to become a caddie, you'll need to get in shape. Here are five workout tips from a golf fitness coach.

Getty Images

It wasn’t long ago that people thought golfers weren’t athletes. Ditto the outdated notion that all caddies are slackers, smokers and scofflaws. Get real. The men and women in smocks today are more essential to the pro game than ever. Part stats nerd, part guru, part pack mule and therapist, a typical looper is both at the center of the action and a side player. What follows this week (and in the Jan./Feb. pages of GOLF Magazine) is a snapshot of the life — and loads of intel for your game.

ICYMI: 9 essential lessons every caddie learns, according to a pro caddie
ICYMI: 10 things a pro caddie would tell you about YOUR game
ICYMI: Joe LaCava opens up on what it takes to carry the bag for the game’s greats
ICYMI: 3 drills to improve your game, according to pro caddies
ICYMI: 3 essential travel tips from 3 well-traveled pro caddies

Schlepping a 40-pound staff bag up and down hills for eight miles a round, never mind to and from the courtesy car, requires serious conditioning. If, after 10 pages of inspiring caddie talk, you’re thinking, Hmm, looping! build your way up to three sets of 12 to 15 of these exercises.

1. Legs: Goblet squats

Doing these squats with a kettlebell or a dumbbell not only builds muscle but also the endurance for long rounds day after day.

2. Shoulders: Standing bicep curl to shoulder press

Lifting a bag time and again taxes the shoulders and biceps. This double-whammy exercise makes the movement much easier.

3. Core: Anti-rotation with cable

Hoofing that staff bag will stress your posture. This exercise mimics that stress and works the entire core.

4. Conditioning: Treadmill with weighted vest

This mimics the job to a tee. Set the treadmill to a good pace and, if desired, change the incline to simulate walking a course as hilly as Augusta National.

5. Ice baths

Take care of your body with ice baths, use a foam roller for your legs (especially those calves) and remember to stay hydrated. As for the old caddie wisdom of “Show up, keep up, shut up,” let’s add, “Pump up!”

Related Articles

Rules
Rules Guy: Is it legal to lean on a tree for support while hitting?
By: Rules Guy
News
The 5 U.S. Open winners at Shinnecock Hills
By: GOLF Editors
Instruction
Insiders Only 9 tips to effortlessly shoot more stress-free low scores
By: Jason Birnbaum with Evan Rothman
News
Golf's wackiest coach? An RV-driving surfer with major-winning pedigree
By: Josh Berhow
Features
Insiders Only Beastly and beautiful, Shinnecock Hills is a perfect exam for golf's ultimate test
By: Michael Bamberger
Rules
Rules Guy: Is a dead animal considered a loose impediment?
By: Rules Guy
Instruction
Lower your handicap fast by practicing these 3 key skills
By: Jason Baile, Top 100 Teacher
Approach Shots
Keep your club on plane and hit better irons with this simple trick
By: Dr. Alison Curdt, with Zephyr Melton
Travel
Why London deserves consideration as the world's greatest golf city
By: Simon Holt
was:
Exit mobile version