Quite frankly I am completely in the dark about some of the claims of 300 yard drives from putative eight handicaps. I know Nicklaus states that with the new equipment and ball he is as long now as he was thirty years ago.
As a fifty year old I could hit the 16th at CPC and the 4th at MPCC Dunes, about 238 yards, with a three of four wood. As a septagenerian I find it difficult to get close with a driver. Titanium drivers exploding Pro V1's, you name it, I seem to be the exception to the rule.
Bob,
The reason you haven't seen it is because it isn't happening. Driving distances are like fish stories.
Go to a flat par four on a relatively windless day, with relatively "normal" firmness in the fairway and wait 300 yds. out from the tee to be struck by a golf ball flying a fairway bunker off the clubface of an 8 handicapper. You'll be there all day.
For the average golfer between a 5 and a 15, a drive that they just kill will go about 265 yds. under the above conditions.
On Monday, I watched the best HS golfers in Georgia at the state AAAAA championship tournament. (By the way, my team, Roswell HS, finished third at 597
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on what will probably be my last day as a HS coach after 31 years) I watched approx. 100 players, many of whom will be playing college golf next year or the year after, come in on #9 and #18, which are parallel with #10 in between. It was a dry, windless day in the mid-80's. I saw maybe 10 balls all day exceed 300 yds. off the tee. The better players averaged about 275.
When players of my level (I'm a 53 yr. old 7 handicap) tell me about 300 yd. drives they have struck or seen struck, I KNOW one of several things has happened.
1. Unusual conditions in terms of wind, drought, etc.
2. Lots of downhill assistance.
3. A scorecard that has "fudged" distances.
4. Tees that were well up from the printed distance.
5. Piss-poor math skills.
6. Literary license.
7. A combination of 1-6.
As to the gap, Craig Sweet is dead on. The gap isn't growing as much as is purported, though clearly a constant % of a growing number results in a growing gap. I guesstimate that the gap between the pros and the "average" 8 handicap off the tee is about 30 yds., and the irons probably run about 15-20 yds. If you take a 420 yd. par four, the pro hits it 285 off the tee, I hit it 255 off the tee. I have 165 left, and hit a 5 iron (maybe a six) while the pro hits a 7, maybe an 8. Check out Shotlink if you think they are hitting 9 irons 165! It ain't happening...