The CSGA Links Volume 5 Issue 1 April 2017 | Page 17
their clubs while playing golf burned an average of 721 calories
for nine holes. Pulling your bag and playing burned an average
of 718 calories, playing with a caddy burned 613 calories, while
playing and riding in a cart burned an average of 411 calories
per nine holes. These numbers demonstrate that walking while
playing golf could have the greatest health benefits.
Another study performed by Kobriger et al., analyzed the average
amount of steps taken during 18 holes. Golfers who walked the
course walked an average of 11,948 steps, which alone easily
puts someone on track to meet the Center of Disease Control
and Prevention’s (CDC) goal for Americans to walk 150 minutes
a week1, 2. Another study performed by Sell et al., examined the
distance golfers walked when carrying their bags as compared to
when they walked with a pull cart or played while riding in a cart.
Not surprisingly, golfers who carried their bags while playing
walked an average of 8.69km (5.4 miles), those who played
with a pull cart walked 7.89km (4.9 miles) and those who rode
in a cart walked 3.86km (2.4 miles). Moreover, Wolkodoff’s study
found that when golfers played with a pull cart, players averaged
the lowest score (40) on nine holes. The remaining player scores
were as follows: a golfer with a caddy (42), a player who took a
cart (43), and a golfer that carried his clubs (45). This supports
that not only will walking the course with a pull cart benefit
one’s health by taking extra steps, but it could help lower one’s
score as well.
Wolkodoff’s study shows that walking a golf course, in lue of
riding in a cart, has health benefits and you could burn up to 600
calories more during an 18 hole round. If you were to change
nothing else in your life besides walking the golf course, and if
you played golf four days a week, then you could potentially lose
a pound a week. Additionally, these articles favor walking the
course because it can potentially result in lower scores.
Next time you go out and play, I urge you to reconsider riding in a cart and walk the course instead.
Even a few extra steps a week can make for a healthier lifestyle.
If you have any further questions in regards to golf-specific physical therapy or golf specific
performance training, feel free to reach out to me at [email protected] or visit my website
www.theGolfDPT.com. Also please check out my instagram, where golf-specific exercises are
posted regularly! @thegolfdpt
@thegolfdpt
www.csgalinks.org
[email protected]
CSGA Links // April, 2017 | 17