Joe, honestly, I think randomly selected at this course meant randomly selected. A 5'7" guy that weighs 135 lbs carries that bag all over creation, so it is not too heavy and its a small stand/carry bag. When we meet someday, pick it up. I never have a problem carrying it, so a caddy shouldn't. I think the caddiemaster might have done it because of the strap thing. When I went back and had the same issue, that's what they cited.
I'll tell you the worst caddie I ever had was the same day as the bag incident. We were there for a Met Golf Writers media day in the afternoon and the guy who was supposed to carry my bag was at the course in the a.m., but for whatever reason didn't get called to carry any bags. Apparently he had words with the caddiemaster about that. So they decided to try to make things easy for him and picked me, thinking Jay gets along with everyone on the golf course, no problem, low maintenance round.
Trouble was he only got my bag...not two. We were a threesome and he drew the single bag. So instead of making four fees for the day like the other caddies, he was making one. It put him in a foul, foul mood.
We had a long ride to the first tee, so I tried to be friendly and ask him where he had caddied before...not to grill him, but to just make conversation and let him talk about himself...break the ice.
He snaps back at me about how he caddied on tour for [name deleted]. I asked him another innocuous question and he snapped at me again about why I ask so many questions, so I clammed up.
It was a shotgun start and we started on 14. Well for four holes, he's ridiculing me! Eddie Peck and our third might be able to quote chapter and verse, but he was not walking with me, not helping, being curt. Eddie noticed it and I just said its nothing, I'll try to work it out.
Well on 16 - the third hole of the day, he told me left-to-right on a putt and I did that and missed the wrong way, so he says, "no I meant left to right this way" indicating the wrong way. So on the next green, he takes out the flag and - in front of everyone - says, "now pay attention...this is your left and this is your right."
I never experienced anything like this. Here it is media day with my peers and this guy is instigating a dispute. I told Eddie that I didn't feel comfortable and he said that he absolutely would have fired the guy on the spot. I told the guy on the tee that when we got back to the clubhouse to go in and send out another caddie.
Now to the course's credit and unbeknownst to me, they were watching the guy because he had been acting up earlier. They saw he and I were not interacting well and came up and asked what happened. I told them. I had a new guy the next hole who was fine.
Adam, swapping the bag was not the caddy's decision, but the club's and they didn't ask me, they just did it while I was inside.
And Ads, I must disagree with you. To me, my golf bag is an extension of me as much as my wallet or keys. It's personal. Maybe I'm silly here, but again, what if I didn't see it and we went out and I got stung by a bee and died because my medicine was back at the clubhouse? Or was gravely hurt? Or what if he forgot to put in my wallet? Or something else I needed? Or something personal? I know a golf buddy from Deerfield that kept a pair of his girlfriend's panties in his bag for luck. What if they pulled THAT out of his bag on the range in front of people?
I agree with Ian Fleming, the author, "never look in another man's wallet" and, by extension, I include my golf bag. I don't mean to see what clubs are in there, but to take stuff out, move things, examine the contents, and select items to be transferred. It's bad form not to ask first.