It’s Time For Caddies To Stop Lining Up Players
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It’s Time For Caddies To Stop Lining Up Players

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It’s Time For Caddies To Stop Lining Up Players

I’ve seen Wyndham Clark’s putting routine one too many times. 

Apologies for singling out a player who has emerged as one of the top golfers in the world over the past year—he isn’t alone in this—but the way he operates on the greens goes too far for me. 

If you haven’t seen it, the gist is pretty simple: Clark relies heavily on his caddie, John Ellis, who spends ample time lining up his player. Ellis also regularly takes a wedge out to address the ball and “simulate” hitting the putt himself. 

In my eyes, the whole process goes beyond being tedious—it’s against the spirit of what the rules should be. 

It has me thinking that there should be an amendment to the current rule that limits the role of caddies when it comes to the alignment of golfers, particularly in the professional game. 

Namely, I don’t think caddies should be able to stand behind their player while the ball is being addressed, regardless of whether the player backs off and resets their routine to avoid a penalty. 

Along similar lines (pun intended), caddies should not be allowed to address the ball to get a “player’s perspective” of the putt. 

Let me explain why I think both of these elements are prime candidates for future rule changes. 

Green Reading Versus Alignment

Caddies are an integral, unique part of golf. It’s one of the most interesting elements of the game. 

I just feel there is one particular skill in golf where caddies should not be permitted to help their player. 

That skill is alignment. 

Alignment is a physical part of the golf swing or putting stroke. How you address the ball is fundamental to what will happen next and that responsibility should belong purely to the player. 

Green reading, in my opinion, falls under the “advice/strategy” category. Caddies provide input on break and speed but the player should have to create the stroke from scratch and execute the shot. 

Lining up correctly takes practice, especially in a game where one degree of difference can completely change an outcome. 

The governing bodies agree with this in principle. In 2019, Rule 10.2b was put in place to make sure caddies could not stand behind a player and tell them where to aim—unless the player backs away and restarts their routine—anywhere on the course. 

“Although a player may get advice from a caddie on the shot to be played, the line of play, and other similar matters, the ability to line up one’s feet and body accurately to a target line is a fundamental skill of the game for which the player alone should be responsible,” the USGA says. 

“Allowing a caddie to stand behind a player taking a stance so as to direct the player how to line up undermines the player’s need to use his or her own alignment skills and judgment.” 

The rollout of that rule had a few speed bumps, necessitating a clarification that the alignment aiding had to be deliberate. Exceptions were made where no penalty was necessary. 

For example, there is no penalty if a caddie does any of the following: 

  • Rakes a bunker while in a direct line behind the player
  • Stands behind as the player walks over to tap in a putt
  • Accidentally stands on or close to an extension of the line of play behind the ball (not deliberately trying to help in lining up)
  • Stands behind a player while holding an umbrella until it’s time to hit the shot. 

There is definitely some level of subjectivity to this rule, although it seems obvious that everyone involved knows when alignment aiding is intentional. 

For instance, some LPGA players were lined up by caddies for nearly every shot. You could see it was deliberate. The player would take their address, the caddie would confirm they were aiming correctly, the caddie would walk away and then the player would hit. The practice was ubiquitous across women’s golf, far more than the men’s game. This still exists but the player now has to back off and start over. 

Back to Clark. 

When his caddie lines him up for a “test alignment” to make sure Clark is aimed correctly, that is deliberate. 

To be clear, it is not in violation of the rules but it is essentially a loophole where Clark gets lined up by his caddie and then resets purely to avoid a penalty. 

When he comes back to hit the ball, his caddie’s input on his alignment is being used as it would if the rule wasn’t in place. The line on the ball—which the caddie helped with—is informing his alignment for the actual shot. 

I’m not calling Clark a cheater by any stretch of the imagination. The rule exists and he is taking advantage of what he can do. There are other players with similar routines. 

Most players don’t do it because they don’t necessarily want that level of granular input from their caddies. They want autonomy. 

It’s a skill to line yourself up properly—and players who are deficient in that skill (or want to use every resource possible) have the option of using a caddie to help them. 

To put it simply, I don’t think they should have that option. 

Why can’t the rule be amended so caddies can’t stand behind the line of play when the player addresses the ball? 

There is a rule about golfers only being able to wait 10 seconds if their ball is hanging on the lip of the hole. Why not clarify the current rule to where a caddie can’t stand behind their player at address for more than three seconds or whatever reasonable amount of time would make sense? 

Sure, a caddie could offer verbal advice on alignment from a different angle. I would love to see this go away as well, although it would probably be too difficult to police. 

That would still be an improvement on caddies getting a perfect vantage point to line up their players. 

Of course caddies should be able to assist in reading a putt—but deliberately lining up their player should not be allowed. 

Caddies Addressing The Ball Themselves

This might be an unpopular take but I feel like caddies addressing a putt to get a player’s perspective is something that doesn’t belong in tournament golf among the game’s best. 

If it happens at a resort where we’re taking caddies who just want to help? Yes, go ahead if you just want to have the best experience. Otherwise, I don’t think it should be allowed. 

All golf shots look different when you’re over the ball. Almost every shot looks simpler from behind the ball. 

How many times have you lined up a putt, stepped up to hit it and said to yourself, “It feels like I’m aimed too far to the left/right from this angle”? 

Being behind the ball and being in the shot provide different feels. The break could look different when you’re over the ball. Maybe how your feet feel over the ball runs counter to the line you pick out behind the ball. 

A part of the player’s responsibility in aiming is managing that. 

When a caddie comes in and uses another club to see what that view will look like, it’s critical information for aiding alignment. They are seeing where their feet are in relation to the ball and the break. 

Alignment is a skill that shouldn’t be influenced by a caddie. 

I get the argument that a caddie for recreational players might be able to help amateurs out by standing over a putt and getting a better sense of what they feel—but it is overkill for a PGA Tour player to get that kind of guidance. 

I’m a big believer that the actual execution of the shot should be completely undisturbed by caddies. Let the players have full responsibility. 

Players take in advice prior to the shot. They talk about line, club selection and other strategic elements with their caddie—then it’s all up to the player to perform. 

That should be standard for all shots on a golf course. 

Conclusion

I could see this being a local rule for high-level professional events only. 

It’s not something amateurs have to worry about too often but it applies to the pro game every week. 

Why is it necessary? I think it is more entertaining and creates a more level playing field when players have full responsibility for the execution of the shot. It’s faster and more enjoyable to watch. 

Would Clark still be a good putter without his routine? Probably. He’s a really good player either way. 

I just think the  existing rule should be clarified to make the game a little better to watch. 

Am I making too much out of this? Let me know below in the comments. 

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 8 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife and dog (of course the dog's name is Hogan).

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





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      Speedgolf

      2 months ago

      Start by penalizing Clark for slow play. He routinely takes more than the 40 second time limit on putting. That will solve involvement by the caddy.!!

      Reply

      Dan

      1 month ago

      Pinehurst resident . I agree and complained the past couple of TV tournaments ..
      Even though Clark missed a couple of aides “line ups” given by his caddie..time consuming and annoying .
      Can’t think of any LPGA players still using this Extra Human putting aide. Amend the rules

      Reply

      Michael O'Malley

      1 month ago

      I don’t think a caddie should be involved in any part of the players decision making in a tournament. Caddies should carry the bag and the player should not be allowed to discuss shot making, club selection with the caddie. Who’s the professional – the player or the caddie?

      Reply

      Max R

      1 month ago

      All of this caddie involvement could be easily minimized by the USGA/R&A demanding a maximum fixed time (e.g. 45 seconds) for a professional or high performance amateur to execute a golf shot. Obviously, this is magnified on the putting green. For example, once it’s a golfer’s turn to putt, they MUST place their ball on the green. Once done, the clock starts. If the ball is not struck by the time limit, a penalty stroke is assessed. Additional penalties could be assessed if the time limit is beyond for example, five seconds. Baseball implemented a shot-clock and what happened? More viewers and faster games! BTW, this would eliminate Aim-Point BS, too!

      Reply

      Ian Clark

      2 months ago

      I 100% totally agree. I’ve been saying to my wife whist watching coverage that this caddies actions should not be allowed. I really don’t like him having a rehearsed look with a wedge. Is Clark (and many other Pros) just there to swing the club after taking instruction from his caddy? That’s exactly how I see it. Let’s limit the caddies job to carrying the bag and maybe giving a simple yardage – once per shot. Not a 10minute opinion and instruction to the player.

      Reply

      Hopp Man

      2 months ago

      Once again, Lighten up Francis, hard to go back on something that has been done for a long time, their are other issues out there that are more important than this little article but I am sure you will get lots of clicks.

      Reply

      Hopp Man

      2 months ago

      GAH there not THEIR, drives me nuts.

      Reply

      Robopz

      2 months ago

      Yes. You’re making too much of this. Waaay too much.

      Reply

      Bret

      2 months ago

      A caddie could influence a missed putt just as easily. It’s not like they don’t make mistakes. The caddie is part of a two person team, but the pro has the ability to veto a caddies input and still must execute the shot. I find the relationship between the two very interesting and would not lessen the ability of a caddie to use what’s currently available to them in order to provide their input. Also, put yourself in the caddies shoes. Their livelihoods depend on providing accurate analysis. If they need to ghost a putt for feel prior to making a decision, I don’t see it as taking responsibility from the player. I see it as due diligence.

      Reply

      Art Swersey

      2 months ago

      I agree. The help from the caddie also gives the player a psychological advantage taking some stress off of the player.

      Reply

      Mike Sullivan

      1 month ago

      I’m trying to imagine how long matches would take if every player’s caddie was doing the same routine.
      Very distracting as well.

      Reply

      J Ryan

      2 months ago

      Completely agree. Standing over the ball with a club is way too much. I would imagine this pisses off many of his competitors. Not a good look.

      Reply

      Dave R

      2 months ago

      I think 80%+ of professional golfers consider their caddies teammates and essential to their success. Some of them have deep personal relationships that go for years. If a player trusts his caddie enough to pull clubs, advise on slope, wind, conditions, hazards on the tee and fairway, why not partner with them on the greens?
      That’s why they are in the team room at Ryder Cups.
      I’m not against limits, but I don’t think a wholesale ban on caddie support on the greens is called for.

      Reply

      Patrick

      2 months ago

      Did you read the full article? Not calling for ban of caddy assistant on the greens

      Reply

      Michael O'Malley

      1 month ago

      If the player doesn’t have the skill-set to make shot making decisions without consulting his caddie; he shouldn’t be playing at that level.

      Reply

      Craig

      2 months ago

      Totally agree. The golfer is the player not the caddie. It would be like a football coach coming out of Huddle to view defense. It’s up to player to determine how to hit putt

      Reply

      BH

      2 months ago

      Nah, they’re too busy rolling the ball back to be bothered by this.

      Reply

      Jay

      2 months ago

      100% Agree. It’s just a weak display.

      Reply

      John Robert Paton

      2 months ago

      I think any involvement of caddies on a putting green outside of taking the flag away is over the top – no green books and no caddies on the putting surface other than to take away or replace the flag(now I’m sure someone can see how that could be manipulated as well but let’s not be pedantic) but I would also say that Wyndam is far from being alone in this complaint –

      Reply

      vito

      2 months ago

      My take is even more extreme. Get rid of caddies altogether. Many of the current players came out of high school and college where you have to carry your own bag. If pros are so good they shouldn’t need a caddy. Besides a caddy is a throwback to a time when the rich and royal played golf and had peons take care of menial tasks like carrying clubs.

      Reply

      Glynch

      2 months ago

      Fully agree , caddy’s don’t score, it’s not a team game .
      Your name ( player goes on the card ) that’s it …
      Take responsibility for your own work .
      Further we don’t see players being lined up by shots from the Tee ? To the Green by caddy’s ….
      And all this adds to the extended , time it takes to play a round …

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      2 months ago

      Francis Ouimet had a caddie. In 1913.

      Pretty sure he wasn’t among the rich and royal.

      High school and college players aren’t carrying *Tour* bags.

      If basketball/football pros are so good, they shouldn’t need coaches. See the logical fallacy in that kind of argument? Otherwise, “if they’re so good” they shouldn’t need swing coaches, either. Let’s ban pro golfers from help from ANY human being, period, ever.

      Reply

      Steve

      2 months ago

      At the professional level, I have never thought the caddie should help lining up putts. These players are the best, and get more help than anyone that plays golf. They should at least do their own thing on the greens, without any outside help. They would probably have a meltdown if that was made a rule.

      Reply

      Craig Brown

      2 months ago

      I’ve watched the “antics” of Wyndham Clark and his caddie over several events. I agree that the caddie addressing the ball with any club to check the ball alignment looks fishy to me.

      Can PGA Tour create its own local rule for this? It seems that It has rules in place that restrict USGA rules such as no practice putting after completing a hole.

      Reply

      Iwan Edwards

      2 months ago

      Ban caddies from the green altogether.
      Also ban lining up the ball, it takes far too long. The player having marked and lifted his ball has one opportunity to replace the ball on the green (as is the case when “lift, clean and place is in operation on the fairway).
      They have a line on the putter, that is enough of an aid.

      Reply

      Dave Ott

      2 months ago

      Short and sweet. Totally agree. Pros get way to much help from caddies.

      Reply

      Michael

      2 months ago

      Totally agree, green reading books yardage books anything that takes time and discussion with caddie is a problem. To much information making a bad short. Jordan Speaks to his caddie Michael way to much he is a basket case.

      Reply

      Joseph Parent

      2 months ago

      There really should be a time limit for getting the putt off. Study the green when walking up to mark your ball. Watch your opponents putts for speed and break. A good caddie should have studied the greens carefully before the match on practice days. He should make notes about pin placements and slopes. Yes he should have input with the player on break and speed, but that’s it. These guys are making a lot of money and should be able to handle the art of putting without having a human shot monitor. Clark is on TV a lot because he is one of the best in the game right now, he also appears to me to be one of the slowest, and maybe that’s just because we see so much of him, but even in the fairways he seems to take forever. It can really be painful to watch him on the greens. Does his caddie make that much difference? If he does, than he is definitely using an outside aid to improve his chances which to me is wrong. This must be a hindrance to most of the players he plays with. I would think that a lot of these guys are effected by his and other players who do similar things. It seems to me like the shot clock never seems to matter on Sundays.

      Reply

      Dave Vardon

      2 months ago

      Totally agree ! The routine of Wyndam’s caddie is ludicrous!! Get the caddies out of this process !!! Another ridiculous routine that adds even more time to the game. They need to put a stop to this for sure !

      Reply

      TacSKS

      2 months ago

      I think this could be better addressed with a putting shot clock. Give the players limited time to read the green, set up , and take the putt. If the player wants to spend their time talking alignment with the caddie, let them. But that valuable time is probably better spent on green reading than alignment.

      Reply

      Sellemental

      2 months ago

      Completely agree with the shot clock / time limit idea. Even if you don’t like this example, maybe someone doesn’t particularly like circling the green a couple times, balancing along the line every 4 feet to feel the slope, plumb bobbing, aim point, or whatever type comes along. Caddie or player, or heaven forbid, both too often.
      Just set a time limit, and ENFORCE IT !!!
      I think this alone would really speed up play and make a much more watchable experience.

      Reply

      Dules

      2 months ago

      AimPoint rankles me way more than what Clark & his caddy do. You got 8 year olds at the Masters pitch & putt doing it. Ridiculous…

      Reply

      birdieman

      2 months ago

      yo pops, it’s more akin to being 30 years old and having your mom tie your golf shoes for you in front of your friends on the first tee. Because she knows you can’t get it right, without strangling yourself or others with the laces.

      Reply

      Pops

      2 months ago

      Dude you need something meaningful in your life. I hope you find it, but you’re tilting at windmills with this one. Go back to complaining about how everyone is trampling my line to line up their own putt. THAT is the real crime here.

      Reply

      Stuart Riddell

      2 months ago

      Hi Sean…
      I couldn’t agree with you more… I have been watching this happening the last few weeks and I can’t believe it hasn’t been brought up sooner.
      For the Caddie to step in with a piece of equipment from the players bag and use that as an alignment tool is just going to far.. I watch Golf to see the best players in the world ply their trade, not to watch the caddie become part of the putting process, what’s next asking a spectator to come over the ropes and help you out with lining up a put? Some guys are slow at reading their own putts this just adds more time to the process and looks downright wrong !!! in my opinion… If every Golfer on the PGA or other televised Pro tours adopted this technique the game would come to a complete halt, in the interests of Slow play it shouldn’t be allowed. If this is the example being set then some recreational Golfers will soon have their partners lining up putts and reading greens just like on the TV, and I don’t want to be the guy playing behind them !!!
      Thanks for the great content and for addressing this issue… Cheers

      Reply

      League Golfer

      2 months ago

      I agree with you 100%. The whole look of it looks like a bunch of “hand holding on a child’s first day of kindergarten.” Play your damn shot, do it now, and let’s move forward with the round, be it a professional tournament or a regular round at the local course. The slower the pros go, the slower the average Joes go. Golf already takes more time than it should or needs to take. These guys, and everyone else too, should be hitting their putts within 20 seconds of their playing partner holing out or marking their ball. We are here for a good time, not a long time.

      Alex

      2 months ago

      Totally agree with you Stuart. When the camera zooms in on the green, I want to see the pros and not the caddies. I admit, the professional golf is foreign to me, I play socially and have never had a Caddie or a Green book!

      @Sean, I started not to read this article, but glad I did. Good work!

      Ron

      2 months ago

      “….what’s next asking a spectator to come over the ropes and help you out with lining up a putt?…….”….. How many people are allowed to “help” a player??…. I guess as many as it takes (to move a boulder)….. :D . Golf is NOT a team sport in essence. Agree totally with the article. Boundaries should be set.

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