Pat,
Do you play your course from 7,200 yards? Did you 15 years ago? It must have been a real slog 15 years ago before the latest quantum leap in technology. My home course is also 15 years old and has back tees at 7300yds, but I've only played back there maybe 2 or 3 times in 15 years. I've always played it at 6500 yds and it's enough challenge. I also score about the same as 40 years ago, but then I was playing a 6,200 yard course then. I'd like to think that 40 years of experience and practise might account for some of my ability to stave off old age. No doubt technology has helped too. But it hardly leads to ruination.
Regarding your comments about moving tees back to keep LZ's viable, that seems to be a low cost practical approach if you want to worry about challenging the relatively few really long hitters. Fortunately my course already has tees back there that even the Nationwide guys have trouble with.
On your assertion that the long hitter facing a 160 yd second shot is a lot better off due to technology than the shorter hitter, I'm not sure that holds up. For me it would be a hard 7 iron. Forty years ago it would have been an easy 6 iron. The longest hitters today don't generally hit it 160 with a PW - maybe a 9 iron under neutral conditions. What technology changes do you think make the long hitter relatively longer for that kind of shot. There's no hi-cor faces on most irons; there's no low spin high launch shots with a PW.
No doubt many irons now have stronger lofts than 15 or 40 years ago. Maybe a club stronger in some cases (hence the filling of the gap at the top end of the set with gap wedges). So that 9 iron from 160 might have been labeled an 8 iron some years ago. So, a two clubs difference - an 8 vs a 6 iron - for the 160 yd shot between a long and short hitter is the way I remember it 40 years ago, and, the way it is today. So, architecturally, assuming there's room to move tees back to put features back in play for really long hitters, I think that older course integrity could be maintained.
Tom MacW,
Why do I enjoy golf more now than in 1966:
With multiple tees I can play from tees that challenge my length (40 years ago there were generally 2 tees for men - one too short and one too long).
The balls last 18 holes or 36 or 54 and stay round and don't smile back
at my mishits.
I find many (free) Pro V1's to play with.
Bent fairways are way better than bluegrass.
My membership costs me no more than it did (in inflation adjusted $'s) 40 years ago.
Modern course design and conditioning is generally way better than it was 40 years ago (with the exception of maybe the classic courses that I couldn't get near then, or now).
I like fast smooth greens and it's easier to find them today than 40 years ago.
There are a lot more reputable courses available today than 40 years ago.
Sean,
It'd be hard to buy other than Chinese manufactured clubs these days.
And, who's foolish enough to buy each annual, or more frequent, purported technology advance from TM or Titleist, etc.
Finally, pheeeew,
for those wanting to dial the ball back, did you have in mind a linear dial or a non-linear one. Pulling Tiger back from 330 carry to 300 would pull Fred Funk back from 280 to 252 and me from 260 to 236. Would this make classic courses better able to withstand the PGA tour? For people like me it merely means moving up from the blue tees to the white. I suspect that many on here want a non-linear dial back on the ball. Maybe 15% at 330, 10% at 300, 5% at 270, and 0% at 240. Now, that's be an engineering challenge. And, why would we want to disproprtionately penalize the long hitter. Is it not a skill to hit it far and stright?