My current buddy - HRH Renn Nicholas, as a puppy. That puppy is now 138 lbs of love. You may notice that Renn gets as excited about the cars and garage as I do.
And now Renn at full size (we hope...)
DWS....speaking from experience, if that Golden is 138, please get some weight off of him. A full grown Golden should weigh in around 90 max. The reason i say this is that a Golden's makeup makes them susceptible to hip problems. Our female Brandi, right after we had her spayed, plumped up. She was running and all of a sudden stopped and pulled her leg up. We took her to the vet the next day and she tore out her ACL. He did the conventional surgery to repair an ACL, and at the time, we ourselves didn't know, but Brandi was really too heavy to have the conventional surgery. We got her home, and had to take her out using a sling. In less than 24 hours, she blew out her other ACL. We had to take her to Ohio State MedVet and they did TPLO surgery on her. Surgery alone was almost $4000.
She was never to run again like she should. Also her leg that had the conventional surgery ended up over the years developing bone cancer. We finally had to have her put down last year due to the cancer being so aggressive. All in all, we had almost $10,000 in surgeries in her back legs which I feel was partly our fault for treating her so nice. A little treat here and there, but not a lot. And after her surgery, she acted like she was starved. I believe that came from having to board her for a month for rehab. According to our vet, a Golden should have no more than two cups of food a day. And since Brandi could no longer run, she couldn't keep her weight down.
Sam the Hell Dog is one year old, and is good size as far as height. I weighed him the other day at the groomers, and he is right at 60 lbs. He's full-size, but he's lean because he does get a chance to run and exercise.
So for your dogs sake, try to slim him down some

