‘You really feel like you’re just another player’: Caddies dish on major differences between life with LIV Golf and the PGA Tour, DP World Tour

“It’s like they got a group of caddies together and asked them to design a tour,” said Austin Johnson.

After his pro-am round ahead of last week’s LIV Golf Team Championship in Miami, Brooks Koepka spoke about how everyone from players to caddies and coaches to managers have enjoyed their time on the upstart series in its first year.

“It’s been fun to see a lot more smiles on people’s faces. I think everyone’s genuinely happy,” said Koepka at Trump National Doral after his round with the club’s namesake and former President of the United States, Donald Trump. “I think the way there’s food for the caddies, the way they’re treated like human beings, I think that’s nice as well, because I’ve seen both sides, and not everybody’s seen both sides.”

The four-time major champion used the same line on caddies being treated like human beings back in September, and while it’s an unfair, indirect comparison to how the PGA and DP World tours treat caddies, there is a stark difference in a looper’s experience with LIV compared to on the various tours.

“You feel more included. The little stuff, like just being able to go into the player dining and eat, and my wife can go in there and hang out and they let her go in all the Club 54’s and get some air conditioning and get a snack, stuff like that,” said Austin Johnson, brother and caddie for LIV’s season-long champion and 24-time winner on Tour, Dustin Johnson. “The Tour was great to us, it was a great place to work, LIV is just better quality of work for caddies.”

“I’m the most-spoiled caddie in the history of golf, don’t get me wrong,” he continued, “but like a lot of these guys, to have all the expenses paid for, to show up to work and know they’re gonna get a paycheck, it’s life changing. It really is.

“I’m not trying to talk bad about the PGA Tour, I’m just trying to highlight how great it is out here. I sound like a spoiled little kid but it’s just nice to be done with the round and I can go sit up in the air conditioning, have lunch with Dustin, have a decent meal versus walking over to some tent and hoping there’s food in there.”

Travel. Hotel. Shuttles. Food. It’s all covered by LIV. On the other tours, those caddie expenses come out of their own pocket. If you and your player miss the cut, you’re leaving empty-handed. That life-and-death weekly grind isn’t for the faint of heart, and LIV’s 54-hole, no-cut events make for a much more relaxed vibe and work environment on the course.

“I think it’s just different out here,” said Chris Rice, who carries the bag for Harold Varner III and spent nine years on the DP World Tour and five on the PGA Tour. “There’s obviously no cut, which helps. That’s why everyone’s got a smile on their face because on the PGA Tour, you’re playing for your livelihood, and if you miss the cut — it’s a bit different for the top guys because they’re always gonna make a lot of money, but for the guys that are lower down and fighting to keep their cards and pay for their family and stuff like that, I think everyone’s just a little bit more relaxed.”

Rice said the lack of a cut takes some of the pressure off, while Johnson argued he feels more pressure when he and Dustin are in contention in LIV events compared to when they were on Tour.

“There’s so much on the line, the difference between first and second is almost $2 million,” he said. “That’s huge. ‘Okay, you didn’t win, you get $2 million,’ but hell, could’ve won and made $4 million.”

Over LIV’s seven regular-season events, first place won $4 million, second won $2.125 million.

“The level of competition, everyone’s like ‘Oh, there’s no cut, what’re you worried about?’ but these guys want to win, they want to beat each other,” added Johnson. “We see each other all the time, we tee off at the same time, eat at the same time, you think these guys like watching (expletive) Dustin just dominate the individual thing? Nah man, it’s as competitive as it could get out here.”

LIV will transition to its 14-event league format in 2023, and officials are banking on the team aspect to commercialize the product and add a revenue stream it currently doesn’t possess. While fans have been slow to get on board, players and caddies are all-in on the teams.

“The team aspect is my favorite part,” said Johnson. “We go to team dinners and we’re hanging out together, we travel together sometimes when we can. Next year it’s going to be implemented a lot more with the team aspect. It’s exciting. It’s fun. It’s been rejuvenating, a breath of fresh air.”

“The whole team aspect is great because everyone’s playing for each other,” Rice agreed. “It’s not just playing for themselves. Because you’re playing for a team. It’s just different to what we normally play for.”

The players get bigger paydays with LIV, which means the caddies do, as well. Money is good on the other tours, but it can’t compare to LIV, where first place wins $4 million and last (48th) earns $120,000. For comparison, to make that much at this week’s PGA Tour stop in Mexico, a player would need to finish in the top 20 (18th – $125,050, 19th – $116,850).

“Pat Perez’s caddie, he worked a few years out on Tour where he might not even have broken even,” said Johnson, using Perez’s longtime looper Mike Hartford as an example. “Flying around the world 30 weeks a year, sharing hotels, sharing rental cars, sharing pizzas, working your ass off and losing money. That shouldn’t happen in America, especially not from a corporation that makes hundreds of millions of dollars off the guys out there working. That’s not right in my opinion.”

Hartford has been walking with Perez dating back to his first year on Tour in 2002. Over the last 20 years, Perez made $29,103,072 on Tour. Across seven LIV events, with a best finish of T-15, Perez cleared more than $8 million in LIV’s first year.

“It’s life changing. I’m just glad my player took me to come and I’m thankful for that, I feel grateful to be here,” said Hartford after he and Perez helped the 4Aces win the inaugural team championship last week. His experience with LIV has been positive, and it’s more than just the money.

“We’re more part of the team. I’m able to go to the dining with Pat, they take care of my hotel expense, my travel, airlines, all the transportation is provided, they make you really feel like you’re just another player, which is awesome.”

Rice said caddies are constantly asking if jobs are open, and he can’t resist the urge to “wind up the boys” each time when they do. But when it’s time to get serious, he’s honest about his experience thus far.

“If you get an opportunity to come out here, it can be life changing,” said Rice, echoing the similar sentiment felt by most LIV caddies. “I think hopefully down the line, I think everyone will start coming together. For the time being, we’ll see how it plays out.”

“I respect the opinions of those who want to stay away from LIV because of its complicated and controversial ties,” an anonymous LIV caddie recently told Golf Digest. “That said, out of my dozen or so closest caddie friends on Tour, half of them are doing everything they can to find a way to LIV. To a lot of us, it’s an opportunity we can’t afford to pass up.”

That money versus morals debate has been a point of contention with LIV since the series was announced. Due to Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund being its sole backer, LIV Golf has long been criticized as a way for the Kingdom to sportswash its human rights record. Saudi Arabia has been accused of wide-ranging human rights abuses, including politically motivated killings, torture, forced disappearances and inhumane treatment of prisoners. Not to mention members of the royal family and Saudi government were accused of involvement in the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and Washington Post columnist.

“I don’t really get involved too much, I don’t really read a lot into it. Everyone’s gonna have their opinion on it and that’s their own personal opinion. I can just give you an opinion on how I found it since I’ve been here,” said Rice. “I think if anyone gets the opportunity, they will for sure come out.”

“It’s like they got a group of caddies together and asked them to design a tour,” said Austin. “I honestly don’t know what they could do to make it better, have someone carry the bag for me is about the only (expletive) thing I can come up with.”

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Tom Kim hires a veteran caddie for the Presidents Cup: Joe Skovron

Rickie Fowler and Joe Skovron parted ways in August after 13 years together.

NAPA, Calif. — Tom Kim will have an experienced hand on the bag at the 2022 Presidents Cup.

The 20-year-old South Korean, who made Trevor Immelman’s International Team, has hired Joe Skovron, who spent the previous 13 years caddying for Rickie Fowler.

Skovron, 41, was by Fowler’s side when he won his first PGA Tour title at the 2012 Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow, host course for the Presidents Cup, which begins Thursday.

“For me, it’s great to be at a course that I’m so familiar with, that Rickie had a ton of success at and we went back to every year,” said Skovron, who spoke while waiting to catch a flight to Dallas to work with Kim this weekend before heading to Charlotte next week. “At least I’ll have familiarity with the golf course as we get a feel for each other.”

Kim has had a meteoric rise to No. 21 in the Official World Golf Ranking. He won the Wyndham Championship in August despite making a quadruple bogey on the first hole of the tournament. In doing so, he became the first winner on the PGA Tour born in the 2000s and the second-youngest winner since World War II, trailing only Jordan Spieth at the 2013 John Deere Classic.

It’s a smart move to pair the inexperienced Kim with a seasoned veteran with plenty of local knowledge. Kim’s agent, Ben Harrison of SportFive, sought out Skovron, a veteran of three Presidents Cups and someone who knows the ins-and-outs of international competition, and made the introduction. Skovron, who first took note of Kim at the Scottish Open this summer, said he’s agreed to work with Kim at the Shriners Children’s Open, Zozo Championship and the CJ Cup this fall.

“It’s an exciting opportunity with Tom and we’ll see how it goes,” he said.

Asked about Skovron teaming up with Kim, Fowler said he hoped the two would click and form a lasting partnership.

“I’m stoked for him,” Fowler said. “We were in Memphis (at the FedEx St. Jude Championship) and Tom was making faces and playing with my little girl. He seems like a great kid. It was great to see him play the way he did at Wyndham. I’m excited for Joe. He’s getting a younger guy who is fresh.”

Joe Skovron at the 2019 Masters.

Fowler and Skovron parted ways last month after 13 years together. For Fowler’s fan club, it will take some getting used to seeing their guy with Ricky Romano, who started on the bag for Fowler this week at the Fortinet Championship in Napa, California.

“With us, it was so much more than a player-caddie relationship,” Skovron said. “We have history from the time he was a little kid, growing up in the same town, my parents knowing him that long, me knowing his family that long, it was tough and I think we did the best we could with it and everything is fine with us. I look forward to our relationship going forward.”

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Rickie Fowler shakes things up with new caddie, coaching change and return to Butch Harmon

“I’m just trying to get back to playing golf than worrying and playing golf swing,” Fowler said.

New season, new team for Rickie Fowler.

The five-time PGA Tour winner announced last month that he parted ways with Joe Skovron, his caddie of 13 years. On Tuesday, Fowler confirmed reports that he also ended a relationship of more than three years with swing instructor John Tillery.

“I couldn’t love the guy any more, and we gave it a good run but it was almost like speaking another language in a way and it never really clicked,” Fowler told Golfweek. “He’s had plenty of success with his guys and I wish I would have played significantly better. I’ll take a lot out of the time we spent together. It’s not like the last few years were for nothing. I gained a lot of knowledge and I feel like I’m in a very good spot.”

When Fowler shows up next week in Napa, California, at the Fortinet Championship, the season opener of the 2022-23 PGA Tour campaign, he will have veteran looper Ricky Romano on the bag.

“He’s about my size,” said the 5-foot-9-inch Fowler. “So, I won’t look too small out there, which is a good thing.”

2021 Zurich Classic of New Orleans
Scott Piercy and caddie Ricky Romano during the second round of the 2022 Zurich Classic of New Orleans in Avondale, Louisiana. (Photo: Stephen Lew-USA TODAY Sports)

Romano, who played at the University of Houston and on the mini tours before turning to caddying and working for the likes of Nate Lashley and Scott Piercy, grew up in Fowler’s hometown of Murrieta, California, and is four years older than him.

“He’s a good fit for me just because he’s someone I know, someone I know is a good player and I can trust his insight from the get-go,” Fowler said. “There won’t be necessarily a big learning curve.”

And who will Fowler be relying on for swing advice? He’s decided to spend more time with his former coach Butch Harmon. Fowler always had remained in contact with Harmon, who he last spent time with ahead of the CJ Cup last October. Fowler held the 54-hole lead before finishing T-3, his best result of the season.

“That was like a stamp of approval from someone who has helped in some of my best years of my career,” Fowler said of Harmon’s contribution that week. “I’m planning to have more communication with him this fall, but not committing or going anywhere outside of that right now.”

Fowler said he plans to play in the Shriners Children’s Open in October and expects to visit with Harmon ahead of that week.

Fowler last won at the 2019 WM Phoenix Open. He missed the FedEx Cup playoffs for the first time in 2021 and snuck into the first playoff at No. 125 in the standings this season.

“I’m just trying to get back to playing golf rather than worrying and playing golf swing,” Fowler said.

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5 items that Webb Simpson and his caddie bring to every tournament

5 items that Webb Simpson and his caddie bring to every tournament

Webb Simpson and Paul Tesori have one of the coolest caddie-player relationships on the PGA Tour. They both share a strong relationship with their Christian faith and get along really well on and off the course.

Tesori has been on the bag for Simpson since 2011 and loves his job. The job doesn’t only require reading greens and gathering yardages, it requires packing the duo’s favorite snacks, items and more.

Golfweek has rounded up some of the team’s favorite items that they bring every tournament week. It’s not easy being on the road all the time, but these five items make it a bit more enjoyable.

John “Johnny Long Socks” McLaren has caddied his last tournament in the United States after 31 year career

Jordan 1s, crazy socks and an unbelievable resume.

It’s rare for a caddie to make a lasting impact on the game of golf. John McLaren has done just that. And no, I’m not talking about his incredible on-course style. It’s the resume he’s built along the way that will make his departure a tough pill to swallow.

McLaren, for the last six years, has looped for Paul Casey, currently ranked 27th in the Official World Golf Ranking. During their partnership, Casey won back-to-back Valspar Championship titles (2018-2019) on the PGA Tour, along with two wins on the European Tour.

McLaren’s career, however, wouldn’t have been the same if not for his visa obtained during his time with Scott Dunlap.

Helen Konrad, an immigration law attorney, put together a list of Dunlap’s finishes before and after adding McLaren to his team, representing how much better Dunlap played during their partnership.

“It’s mostly for visiting artists. It’s pretty easy if you’re the only cellist in the world,” Dunlap told the Associated Press. “But when you’re selling yourself as a caddie, the powers-that-be can say, ‘Hell, anyone can carry a golf bag.’ Legally, you had to show you really want this guy.”

Despite the challenge, the O-1 visa was approved and McLaren officially became “an alien of extraordinary ability.”

Before he carried the bag for Casey, he worked with another Englishman, Luke Donald. During their time together, Donald reached No. 1 in the world and earned $30 million. Pretty lucrative pairing.

Unique on-course style

A detailed view of the sneakers worn by caddie John Mclaren during the second round of the Valspar Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

McLaren wasn’t afraid to rock some pretty vibrant combinations on the course. Tie-dye Jordan 1s with the cartoon socks – it’s a vibe.

This look has become a McLaren staple, as you can see…

A detailed view of the sneakers worn by caddie John McLaren during the final round of the 2020 PGA Championship golf tournament at TPC Harding Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports
A view of the socks and sneakers of caddie John McLaren on the 18th green, McLaren caddies for Paul Casey (not pictured) during the third round of the 2020 PGA Championship golf tournament at TPC Harding Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports
John McLaren the caddie of John Casey draws the attention of fans on the 9th tee with his Jimmy Butler socks to go with his Air Jordan’s during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Erin Hills. Mandatory Credit: Rick Wood/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel via USA TODAY Sports

His visa will expire in a few months (February 2022), but it won’t be renewed. After a Dubai event on the European Tour at the start of next year, McLaren will call it a career.

This “break up” will add to the recent caddie changes we’ve seen over the last few weeks, a list which includes Justin Thomas/Jimmy Johnson, and Bubba Watson/Ted Scott.

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Jim Furyk’s son fills in as caddie as Fluff Cowan misses SAS Championship on PGA Tour Champions

In Jacksonville last week, it was Furyk & Friends. This week in North Carolina, it was Furyk & Son.

In Jacksonville last week, it was Furyk & Friends.

In North Carolina this week, it was Furyk & Son.

Jim Furyk, competing in the PGA Tour Champions SAS Championship at Prestonwood Country Club, finished tied for third with his son Tanner on the bag.

“I’m sure he enjoyed it and I promise you I enjoyed it 100 times more. Special week,” Furyk said after his round. Regular caddie Fluff Cowan was taking the week off. “I feel bad that Fluff went down, that he wasn’t able to be here. I hope he’s healthy and getting better.”

This was a week after he and his wife hosted the first ever Constellation Furyk & Friends tournament on the PGA Tour Champions.

Furyk and Tanner were teammates in the PNC Championship last December in Orlando. The SAS was the first time Tanner caddied for his old man.

But he wasn’t the only Furyk child at the tournament.

“It was a real special opportunity for our family. Caleigh [daughter] came in from college,” he said. “To have Tanner on the bag, just really cool. Then to have a real solid week and kind of come down the stretch and feel like you’ve got to make a putt on the last.”

Furyk briefly took the clubhouse lead at 11 under after draining a birdie on the last.

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“I had him in there reading it. He put a great read on it, actually. Noticed something about the green that I didn’t early in the putt. Yeah, just really cool. A great memory for me.

“To go out and play well was a little icing on the cake.”

Furyk is among the 72 golfers who have advanced to the Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs, which starts this week at the Dominion Energy Charity Classic at the Country Club of Virginia in Richmond, Virginia.

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Report: Jim ‘Bones’ Mackay is headed back to his original career as Justin Thomas’s full-time caddie

Mackay, who has become a familiar voice for NBC Sports/Golf Channel, is headed back to caddie life.

Jim “Bones” Mackay, former longtime caddie for Phil Mickelson, has become a familiar voice on golf broadcasts. Since transitioning off the bag for the six-time major winner to a role with NBC Sports/Golf Channel in 2017, Mackay has intermittently made caddie appearances, most notably for Justin Thomas but also for Matthew Fitzpatrick in 2020.

According to a GolfChannel.com report on Thursday, Mackay is back to his old gig. He’ll pick up the bag for Thomas once again, this time becoming Thomas’s full-time man.

“It came out of left field very recently. I have just tremendous respect for [Thomas]  as a person and a player,” Mackay told Golf Channel on Thursday. “It was an incredible phone call to get and I said yes.”

That doesn’t mean he’s abandoning the headset completely, however. Golf Channel reports that he will continue his work as an on-course reporter when time allows. In the short-term, that includes next week’s Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas.

“I love to caddie and I loved my role with NBC/Golf Channel,” he told the network, “but it’s Justin Thomas.”

Thomas has long worked with Jimmy Johnson – since Thomas started out as a rookie in 2015. Johnson was even inducted into the Caddie Hall of Fame.

Johnson was on the bag for Thomas for many major milestones, including the 2017 PGA Championship (which remains Thomas’s sole major title), the 2017 FedEx Cup title and most recently, his 2021 Players Championship victory.

Mackay caddied for Thomas when he won the 2020 WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational.

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Watch: Baseball player walks to the plate with ‘caddie,’ complete with yardage book, rangefinder

Josh Lavender approached the plate in style, with a caddie who brought his bat and accessories. It happened to be the team president.

Golf’s popularity continues to permeate the rest of the sports world.

For instance, check out this fun moment from a wooden bat baseball game on Thursday between the Savannah Bananas and the Macon Bacon. (For the record, those are the real names of both teams.)

During Thursday night’s game, infielder Josh Lavender approached the plate in style, with a caddie who brought his bat and accessories. In the background was team owner Jesse Cole, known for wearing a yellow tuxedo to nearly every game.

The Bananas typically play in the Coastal Plain League — they won the league title last week — but this was part of a new Harlem Globetrotters-like series that Cole and Co. created as more of an event.

Lavender’s walk-up, which included a yardage book and range finder, is certainly one all golfers can appreciate.

We might add that the Bananas are no stranger to fun moments. For example, the team’s website touts the following:

• We only sell one ticket and it’s all inclusive.
• Our players perform choreographed dances every game – Britney Spears, Michael Jackson, Toby Keith – you name it, they’ve danced to it.
• We are the only baseball team to play in kilts. That’s right, kilts.
• Our players perform in over-the-top music videos like Old Town Road and Can’t Stop the Peeling.
• We have the most unique coaching staff in the world – a luchador, cowboy boots, a nine year old and a grandma.

Savannah won the game, 8-4, with the Bananas beating the Bacon in what’s termed the “breakfast bowl,” which led to this incredible postgame interview.

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Brooke Henderson says there’s a chance sister Brittany will be back on the bag at KPMG

Brooke Henderson says big sister Brittany might be back on the bag this week. “Hopefully things go the right direction soon.”

JOHNS CREEK, Georgia – Brooke Henderson still has veteran caddie Everette Nini with her at the KPMG Women’s PGA, but there’s a chance big sister Brittany will be back on the bag this week at Atlanta Athletic Club.

“Maybe,” said Brooke. “It’s just kind of at the point where we’re just waiting, and hopefully things go the right direction soon.”

Canada’s Henderson played for the first time since February 2016 without Brittany on the bag at last week’s Meijer LPGA Classic and missed the cut with rounds of 75-67. Brittany’s work visa expired on June 15.

Last September, the former Symetra Tour player married Zach Sepanik, who hails from Grand Rapids and works for the LPGA’s communications team, and applied for new immigration status. The couple bought a house in Naples, Florida, after they wed and have been working with Senator Marco Rubio’s office to expedite the paperwork.

KPMG: Odds, predictions and picks

Brooke, a two-time winner of the Meijer (2017 and 2019), said the biggest change with having someone else on the bag was a dip in her confidence.

“We’ve worked together for five years, and she just knows me so well, so things are very easy,” said Brooke. “Everett was great. He did a great job. I didn’t play that well, but he was right there for me and helped me out a lot.

“I think just explaining what I wanted to happen and speaking my mind, where normally Brit kind of knows what I’m thinking already, so that was probably the biggest challenge. Somewhere down the road when I do have another caddie, I just have to remember to speak clearly and really explain what I’m trying to do.”

Brooke Henderson
Brooke Henderson hits her tee shot on the 11th hole during round two of the Meijer LPGA Classic for Simply Give at Blythefield Country Club on June 18, 2021 in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

Henderson, 23, ended a victory drought that dated back to June 2019 in dramatic fashion at the Hugel-Air Premia LA Open. She raved about the condition of Atlanta Athletic Club and said the two nines on the Highlands Course play quite differently. She hopes it continues to play long as the week goes on.

“Just on the front nine, lots of times the bunkers are up the right-hand side,” said Henderson, “and as long as you’re left of them, you’re good, and then on the back nine, there’s bunkers on both sides, and you kind of have to hit a little bit straighter in between them.”

A 10-time winner on the LPGA, Henderson’s lone major victory came at the 2016 KPMG Women’s PGA at Sahalee.

After falling ill with a cold at the Mediheal and then competing without her sister by her side in Michigan, Brooke flew home to Florida for the weekend for a couple days on her own to rest, regroup and practice.

“I feel like I’m in a much better place,” she said.

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Emilia Migliaccio and her mother set to make history at Augusta National on Saturday

Emilia Migliaccio and her mom Ulrika will make a memorable mother-daughter caddie duo at Augusta National.

AUGUSTA, Georgia – Emilia Migliaccio’s mother was getting fitted for a white caddie jumpsuit on Friday afternoon at Augusta National. Ulrika Migliaccio must surely be the first mom to ever caddie for her child in a competitive round at Augusta National.

Emilia, a first-team All-American at Wake Forest, will mostly rely on mom for yardages and club selection in Saturday’s final round at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur. Ulrika played collegiate golf alongside LPGA Hall of Famer Annika Sorenstam at the University of Arizona, where she earned All-American honors.

“My mom has been my inspiration in everything,” said Emilia.

Ulrika asked her daughter if she wanted to take a local caddie for the final round, where Emilia trails leaders Rose Zhang and Ingrid Lindblad by four strokes. Rachel Heck, a freshman at Stanford who sits three shots back, made arrangements long before this week that her father, Robert, wouldn’t be on the bag for the final round.

For Emilia, however, it was a clear choice.

“I think it would just be really special for us to be on the bag together,” said Emilia. “I think it will be a moment that we couldn’t replicate anywhere else.”

LPGA: U.S. Women's Open - Second Round
Emilia Migliaccio (left) and her mom and caddie walk up to 1st tee box during the second round of the U.S. Women’s Open golf tournament at Champions Golf Club. Photo credit: Erik Williams-USA TODAY Sports

Ulrika has caddied for her daughter from the start at small junior events. They frequently went out as a family and played a par-3 course near North Carolina State’s Lonnie Poole Golf Course in Raleigh. As Emilia grew and the stakes got higher, Ulrika remained at her daughter’s side. When Emilia won gold at the 2019 Pan American Games, her mom was her caddie.

Now, as Emilia prepares to wind down her golf career, choosing to spend the summer on Golf Channel’s editorial staff rather than working her way through LPGA Q-School, this once-in-a-lifetime round at Augusta is particularly poignant.

That being said, Migliaccio isn’t likely to get too caught up in sentimentality on Saturday.

“I just want to give it everything I have,” she said, “absolutely everything at having a chance to win the title. It would mean so much.”

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