DMoriarty -
I totally acknowledge the statistics that players are driving the ball longer and that hitting the fairways is no longer the "priority" it once was.
(As an aside, it would be interesting to compare the width of fairways on the PGA Tour today with the width of fairways on the Tour 30 years ago. My guess is fairways are appreciably narrower, which might also help explain why more players are missing them!)
While you and others may want to obsess about stats like that, I would prefer to see who is being competitive in golf tournaments.
2005 Masters - top 10 finishers included Di Marco, Immelman, Hensby, Clark, Weir, Donald
2005 Players Championship - top 10 finishers included Funk, Durant, Donald, Lehman, Verplank
2005 US Open - top 10 finishers included M. Campbell, Clark, Hensby, Mediate, Price, Oberholser (Estes & Pavin tied with 2 others for 11th!)
2005 British Open - top 10 finishers included Montgomerie, Couples, Olazaball, M. Campbell, Langer
2005 PGA - Elkington, M. Campbell, Hart, Flesch, Toms, Purdy
Over HALF the top 10 finishers in the 5 most important golf tournaments in the world last year were either hitters of modest length, players of modest size or over the age of 40.
That is more than enough, in my mind at least, to establish that "the sky is not falling" and to prove there is a whole lot more to posting a low golf score than being 6'3" and driving the ball 320 yards.
DT