Cayce Kerr has seen it all as a PGA Tour caddie for 35 years at more than 1,000 tournaments and over 125 majors. During that time, he has worked for 14 major winners, including nine Hall of Famers and seven former World No. 1s. And he brings a unique perspective to the current debate on whether Distance Measuring Devices should be allowed on the PGA Tour.
That’s because he made an absolute killing wheeling and dealing the devices when they first revolutionized golf nearly 30 years ago.
“I know what it doesn’t do,” he said in a recent phone interview. “It doesn’t slow down play.”
But let’s first back up to the remarkable story of how Kerr became the first person to market a laser or rangefinder on Tour, selling the devices to the likes of Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson. Kerr details this incredible story and many other tales from his caddie life on the Tour with “Fred, Fuzzy, Vijay, Tiger and more,” in a soon-to-be-published book (June 3) titled “Walking With Greatness.”Kerr was caddying for Fuzzy Zoeller at the 1995 U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills when his boss requested a yardage and Kerr simply told him that he was far enough away at the par 5 to just bang 3-wood from the rough. That wasn’t good enough for Fuzzy who wanted a more exact yardage. A spectator near the rope line overheard the conversation and later told Kerr that his Austrian-based company,