Because if you took away some of the yardage that a player gained because of his increased strength or swing, you would be failing to reward him for his abilities. If you just arbitrarily roll back the ball some percentage as many here have argued, you would be penalizing the guys who worked hard to get better.
John, you really lose me here. The relative strength of the golfer compared to all other golfers will not change one single bit. We would not be weighing select golfers down like we do horses. So long as they are all playing a ball that qualifies under the same rule, what is the problem?
Under your reasoning, it would be unfair to hold tournaments at sea level or at extremely humid, "heavy air" courses, or at courses with wet or uphill fairways, because at those courses the strong, strapping young professional would not able to fully utilize the absolute distance (as contrasted with relative distance) to which you seem to believe his increased strength entitles him.
Sure they would still hit it further than the others, but not by as much, which might take away one or two clubs worth of advantage on the second shot that they rightfully earned.
I don't know what you mean by "rightfully earned." Are you suggesting that there is something inherently fair about the current technology so that a certain increase in strength exactly equals a properly proportionate increase in advantage? What is this proper proportion and how do you calculate it? Were golf courses inherently unfair to strong players in the days before manufacturers could precisely tune equipment to a professionals' swings to maximize his advantage? Why wouldnt this still be true with different technological limitations?
What if golf is currently inherently unfair because the guy with a minimal increase in strength gains a huge advantage over others who are only slightly weaker? What if, with today's technology, as strength increases linearly, advantage increases geometrically, thus disporportionately advantaging the stronger golfer? Isnt this what is happening in golf today?
The USGA hasn't changed their testing methodology or the maximum distance that a ball can travel. Therefore, the fact that players swing faster and use fancier clubs that propel the ball further is the primary reason the ball goes farther.
Do you think it is consistent with the spirit and intent of the USGA rules that equipment manufacturers have managed circumvent the rule to build a combination of equipment that "propels the ball further" than the USGA limitation?
There are way too many variables in this equation for the simplistic solution of just arbitrarily rolling back the ball.
Who says rolling back the ball would necessarily be "arbitrary?"