“The study shows there’s significant energy expenditure in golf, more than bowling and some other sports it’s been compared to,” Wolkodoff said to the AP. “There are a lot of sports that don’t have this level of energy expenditure.” Subjects walking and carrying their clubs burned 721 calories per round, while the lazy folks in the carts burned just 411. Surprisingly, there was no difference in carrying clubs versus using a push cart, so save your back and rent the cart. The data also suggested that players went past their anaerobic thresholds after walking through two uphill holes (feeling the burn). So golf burns more calories than an hour of billiards (216), fishing (302), or even a relaxed canoe trip (345), but we’re not sold that energy expenditure alone defines what a sport is. Everyone agrees that cheerleaders have bodies to prove they’re burning calories, but good luck getting consensus on whether it’s a sport. Curling only burns 345 calories during an hour of competition, but in Canada, it’s not just a sport, it’s the national pastime. Is Tiger Woods proof that golf is a sport, or is John Daly confirmation to the contrary? That probably depends on whether you’ve got a set of clubs in the garage.