How Jordan Spiethâs caddie might have earned more than $2 million for
Michael Greller was a sixth-grade teacher at Narrows View Intermediate School in University Place, Wash., reportedly earning $77,000 a year, when Jordan Spieth hired him to caddie in 2013.
Greller took a leave of absence beginning in January of that year, and when he soon realized that Spieth had a future in the game tendered his resignation in May.
Good move.
We canât know the financial arrangements that Spieth and Greller have, so for this exercise weâll go with a standard five percent of Spiethâs purse, seven percent for a top 10, and 10 percent for a victory (meanwhile disregarding the weekly stipend players usually pay their caddies, regardless of performance).
On that basis alone, Greller earned $1,040,613 during the PGA Tourâs 2014-â15 wraparound season. Throw in another $100,000 for Spiethâs victory in the unofficial Hero World Challenge and about $85,000 for Spieth winning the Australian Open and Grellerâs take for those 12 months moves to $1,225,613.
Then there is Spiethâs $10 million bonus for winning the FedEx Cup. There is no reason to believe that Spieth would not follow Billy Horschelâs example from the year before of giving his caddie a 10 percent share of that, too. Spieth frequently credits Greller for helping him succeed.
So throw another $1 million on the pile and itâs possible that Greller, the former sixth-grade teacher turned caddie, earned $2,225,613.
Greller would have had to teach another 29 years at $77,000 per year to earn that.
Comments
Post a Comment