Shivas/Rick,
You fellows insist on treating the symptom and not the disease.
The problem is that most of the field can now routinely launch driver and get to the green. This hasn't been the case if you look back over the results of even two Opens ago.
Prior, the strategy worked like this;
You had this big, wide expanse of fairway, but you also knew that if you got within 100 yards of the green you were left with some type of less than full shot off a tight lie and normally had to negotiate the Valley of Sin in some way...either throwing your ball up in the air to the vagaries of the wind or trying to run it up and through.
Of course, you could try to favor the right (OB) side and avoid that conundrum, but then you would be bringing a potential bigger number into play.
Believe it or not, quite a number of pros used to play irons from the tee to leave themselves far enough back (just over Granny Clark's Wynd) for a full shot.
Do either of you recall the exuberance of Seve Ballesteros when he birdied 18? The hole was never a routine birdie hole before, guys. Yes, 3 was always a good possibility but required thought, planning, and execution.
Do either of you recall how rare it was in our lifetimes when Big Jack, downwind, took off his sweater and had a go of it?
This is hardly the only hole where uninhibited technology has reduced strategy, on The Old Course or any other course in the world.