Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Inside the life of a caddie: Tiger, Rory, how to win at Wells Fargo

- By Scott Fowler The News & Observer

The life of an elite

PGA Tour caddie has always been somewhat mysterious to me.

There they are, always two steps behind the golfer getting the headlines. The top caddies know what is needed in a game where so much depends on confidence and provide it. They unofficial­ly serve as coach, psychiatri­st and pack mule.

Joe Lacava is one of the best caddies in the world, having worked on the PGA Tour for more than 35 years. Most famously, he was Tiger Woods’ caddie for roughly a decade, but he also worked for 20-plus years for Fred Couples and, currently, for world No. 8 golfer Patrick Cantlay, who is in the Wells Fargo field this week.

A member of the Caddie Hall of Fame, Lacava was in Charlotte on Tuesday morning as the featured speaker at the Hood Hargett Breakfast Club. He and I had an on-stage interview that was supplement­ed by occasional questions from the audience, and Lacava’s quotes in this story come from that appearance. Lacava told stories about working for Tiger Woods, his brief spat with Rory Mcilroy at the Ryder

Cup last year and how he thinks the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip will be won this week.

Let’s start with the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip, which began stroke play Thursday at Quail Hollow Club. Lacava characteri­zed Quail Hollow as “a little bit of a bomber’s paradise,” meaning it favors long hitters.

“I went out there (Monday),” Lacava said. “There was not a lot of rough. So I think you’ve gotta bomb it. It’s a great golf course for Rory Mcilroy (who has won the event three times).

... I think length off the tee helps and then the greens are extremely firm . ... Patrick (Cantlay) is capable of all that, but you’ve still got to get it done.”

Of Woods, whom he caddied for following Couples, Lacava said he found out early how detailed and technical Woods liked to be.

“With Tiger,” Lacava said, “I would do all my research on a Monday or a Sunday and then I would send him a very, very lengthy text. And he loved that. He liked to know all that before he got on the golf course. How the golf course might play that weekend. He loved that kind of stuff. And then Fred Couples — he didn’t want to think about the golf until Thursday (the day most tournament­s begin).”

In his decade working for Tiger, which included Woods’ win at the 2019 Masters, Lacava said they shared dozens of meals but they were mostly room service, since

Woods had a difficult time going out in public due to his level of fame. However, very early in their relationsh­ip, Woods invited him to eat a steak dinner at 5 p.m., at a restaurant opening at that exact hour.

“So I show up at 5 o’clock,” Lacava said, laughing, “and Tiger is already halfway through his steak . ... He got there early, ordered a salad, steak and baked potato, and cuts it all up and eats it in about four minutes. As soon as my salad comes, Tiger is done with his steak, and he gets up and leaves. We spent about six minutes together. From then on, I knew it was Tom Coughlin time — 5 p.m. means 10 minutes until 5.”

But Woods’ talent, even though he had seen it for years on the tour while working for Couples, would still occasional­ly floor Lacava. At one early tournament, when Woods needed a birdie on the final hole to assure a win, he ended up with a 20foot putt.

“The putt was fast, from 20 feet, and it breaks two or three feet,” Lacava said. “And he rolled this thing in like it’s a one-footer. And I said, ‘Damn! I’m about to get rich.’ ”

Lacava is from Connecticu­t and still makes his home there, flying to every tournament to meet Cantlay. He said he’s on the road about 150 nights a year. A decent golfer himself who briefly played college golf and now has a 7-handicap, Lacava’s big early break came when he caddied for

NASCAR Cup Series

The Goodyear 500 from Darlington (S.C.) Raceway, noon FS1 his cousin, Ken Green.

Green was a successful golfer who won five times on the PGA Tour. And on the tour, Lacava began to get to now people, which helped to lead with his partnershi­p with Couples.

In 1992, Couples won the Masters and Lacava was thrilled. Caddies make more money when their players win — much of their yearly earnings is tied to how well their golfer does — but it wasn’t all that. Lacava was happiest that he had caddied for a Masters winner, and to commemorat­e that he decided to take not only the No. 18 flagstick (common for the winning caddie to do) but also take the flagstick itself.

“So this man from Pinkerton security (which worked the Masters at the time) said very nicely: ‘Son, where are you going with that? You can’t have that. That’s Augusta’s property,’ ” Lacava remembered. “Typical me. I said, ‘If you can get if from me, you can have it.’ He didn’t say anything. I didn’t say anything. And I walked off (with the flag and the stick, which Lacava still has along with a similar trophy from Woods’ 2019 Masters win).”

In 2023, Lacava was most in the news when he had an argument with Mcilroy on the course. Cantlay had rolled in a crucial 40-foot putt, and Lacava started swinging his cap wildly, mimicking what the crowd in Italy had been doing all day.

PGA

Wells Fargo Championsh­ip final-round play, noon CBS

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