RE: Ross -
With the new technology he and others basically had two choices - continue to build the same type of greens much, much faster, build greens on tougher sites (perhaps taking them further up a hill than he might have, but cutting it in for vision, or build new designs using the technolgy available to them.
I read his comments at the top of the thread to definitely consider the first two of three options, but have no reason to believe he wouldn't experiment in limited doses with new designs as well.
That is a good point about the influence of carts on golf architecture and in conjunction with dozers. Yet something besides dozers and carts led to the transition to the overuse of aerial demands dictated by modern designs. Wilson, Crump, Flynn and others were transitioning American golf into one that had ground and aerial options on some holes and aerial demands on others. Conditioning and design transitioned from this to an almost complete reliance on the aerial game dictates. This was truly a dark age. I'm glad there is variety and a balance of testing coming back big time into golf architecture. I like aerial demands as part of the testing process, but like many innovations, it was taken way too far.
Wayne,
That is one of those statements that is accepted as fact on this board, that never goes challenged. But is it true?
In modern design, I still see most green with open fronts that would allow run up access to the green. Just a guess, but I doubt more than 10% of modern greens from all gca's force an aerial carry by design. For both you and me, I think that qualifies as the aerial game being a partial test, but not the only test of a golfers game.
For that matter, when I read the Golden Age stuff by gca, they talk about hitting the green on the fly and reduced demands in the same type of language we use! I also surmise that those who did long for the old days of playing the Scottish way were, as now, in the minority.
Greens were irrigated in some areas by the 1920's even if fairways weren't. They may have been irrigated by one center sod cup, or perhaps 3-4 quick coupler outlets around the green. The trend to watering greens to help golfers hold shots was in place by the Golden Age. The limited technology of greens only watering may have made the typical country club greens much softer than today, because they had to overwater certain areas to get the driest areas suitably covered.
If anything, today's systems even coverage and better mowing and maintenance practices in the approach areas probably leave a BETTER option for the run in game than our forebearers may have experienced. However, it still makes little sense to play the run in game. Why? Just like flying is safer than Amtrak because the potential to hit something in mid air is nil compared to potentially hitting a truck at every crossing, the aerial game offers only one chance for the ground to deflect the ball off its intended course, rather than many.
Even then, all new ball and club technology was aimed at getting the ball up in the air and further than it previously went! I believe that many here overly romanticize how golf was played back then.