Tom P.
Your post defends the USGA's endless deliberations and stalls while the equipment manufacturers have been stealing away our game. While I disagree, this is beside the issue raised by Tom D. and in my post.
My post concerned the USGA's activity, not their passivity.Lost Dunes is a respected and (apparently) difficult course, yet its powers-that-be are planning to add length
at the suggestion of the USGA. Moreover, their goal is to
make the course more attractive to the USGA by conforming to implicit USGA tournament site standards. To put it mildly, this trend of stretching our courses to absurd lengths is not in the best interest of the game. Yet the USGA is apparently out there counseling courses to do just that.
Also, the USGA implies the very same message through its US Open course selections and setups. Hosting our national championship is probably the greatest honor a U.S. course can receive, so naturally the rest of the golf community assumes that the event represents not just the best golf, but also the best golfing conditions. As a role model, the USGA is failing the game.
So even setting aside equipment issue, it is hard to see how the USGA is acting in the best interest of the game. Throw in the equipment issue and it becomes impossible to seed how they are acting in the best interests of the game.
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Now turning to your post . . .
Your apologist approach would have been much easier to swallow ten years ago, when the writing was on the wall but before things got so out of hand.
Tom Paul said . . .
We live in a complicated world and the regulators of golf and the manufacturer's of golf equipment are definitely not on the same side of this distance issue. It's like a tug of war with the manufacturers on one side and the regulators on the other. In the middle is what both of them are trying to win---the golfers of this world. The manufacturers are very good at seducing the world's golfers with what just may be the most seductive thing of all about golf---distance!
It is not just the golfers, the courses are in the middle as well. As expained above, the USGA has quite a lot of power regarding what happens to the courses. Dont believe me? Remember that a suggestion by
a few lowly USGA volunteers may result in the lenghening of Lost Dunes, even over the designer's objections. Shouldn't the USGA work defend and preserve the great courses as opposed to encouraging their surrender?
There is a very real danger today that if the regulators don't properly convince the world's golfers of these dangers and just simply continue to pay occasional lip service to the problem, the manufacturers very well might just forego conforming to the regulators rules and regs altogether and sell completley non-conforming balls and equipment to the world's golfers and then where would golf and architecture be in the future?
The USGA is supposed to lead, not follow, and sometimes leaders must risk their position and even their existence to do what is right and necessary.
If the USGA ever steps up and starts acting like leaders instead of lackeys then they'll find that they have quite a lot more power than you describe. Think about it . . . they control all our national championships (including our most prestigious tournament), have close connections to many of our greatest clubs and courses, and have been widely acknowledged and accepted as the ruling body of golf for around a century. As long as the PGA, Augusta, The R and A, and the clubs would stand with them, the equipment manufacturers would have no choice but to fall in line.
And if the equipment manufacturers choose to betray the game, then the hell with them. Ignore them. And ignore the cheaters who choose to use their cheating equipment. Dont give them handicaps, dont let them in tournaments, dont accept them in your clubs or foursomes.
The equipment industry needs golf a whole lot more than the golf needs the equipment industry.
It'd be in a whole lot worse place than it is today, that's for sure! The regulators of golf balls and equipment may not be doing a good job of controlling the manufacturers and increased distance but they defiinitely are not 'shills' of the manufacuturers no matter how much you mght like to think that.
Tom, our championship courses are fast approaching (and surpassing) the 7500 yd mark; the distance gap between similarly skilled long and short hitters has grown to a six or more club difference (well beyond the point where it is possible to appropriately accomodate them both on the same course;) our greatest courses are either being modified and lengthened again and again or set up so severely that they make a mockery of some of the greatest holes we have; long courses built less than a decade ago are becoming obsolete;
a fourteen year old girl consistently drives the ball farther than John Daly did in his prime.I just dont see how "it could possibly be a whole lot worse place than it is today."
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As for the shill comment . . .
Through their apparent satisfaction with and involvement in corrupt systems, 'shills' dupe others into being swindled, tricked, or manipulated. While those running the USGA may be unwitting shills, they are shills nonetheless.