while the championship proper is dominated by college kids, the qualifying and the stroke play portion of the tournament remain bastions of the joe lunchbucket golfer.
this year's qualifier at Bethpage attracted 192 contestants trying to get one of five spots. Most of them people who have tried to get in for years and look forward to the annual attempt, however unlikely. the group is MOSTLY older players, and includes, restaurant owners, wall street hedge fund managers, and a lot of guys with no visible means of support. One guy carries a gallon jug of water around the course.
the people at Bethpage are very generous about closing a course down, and the superintendent and green staff take great pride in cutting and rolling the greens and otherwise peaking the course, just like a pvt club would. Many people who otherwise would never get to play in any sort of competition come off the 18th green wondering why they couldn't shoot the same 74 they post with their buddies every weekend--they get a little taste of how different golf becomes when the flag goes up on the flagpole and there's a rules official announcing your name on the first tee.
the qualifiers are mostly college kids, yes, but one in four or five are people with jobs. Bethpage sent a player to the championship this year who is a software salesman and who took the game back up last year after a 25 year layoff. He shot a 40 on the final nine to miss the match play by a single shot, choking all the way, and had the time of his life. He will remember the week forever. Almost every year Bethpage has at least one story like this, and i'd guess there are lots of others around the country too. One year it was a retired fireman. Both of these players, and i'll guess all the older guys, take a great deal of pride in being able to beat their way through the college kids and take a spot away from them.
The tournament could become a sort of "publinx mid-amateur" by moving to the fall, but the quality of play would drop dramatically, and i for one think the older guys like to play against the best anyway.
The USGA runs 13 championships (i think) but this one is different. Its not completely about identifying the best golfer, best girl junior golfer, etc. A big part of this one is celebrating public golf, which is 3/4 of the golf courses and i think 2/3 of the golf played in the US. Most of this celebration you dont see because its over before the match play begins.
You're right-college golfers win it all the time, they have privliges that in many ways are much BETTER than membership at a private club, amateurism is dead, cats and dogs are sleeping together, etc. so what. This could all be fixed or the championship could simply be cancelled, but before you argue for doing all this, consider the good the tournament does at the grassroots level, before the TV coverage begins.