Jim Nugent,
That's my point.
The challenge that was heightened at Soule Park was screamed down.
There's clearly a trend away from demanding or penal architecture at the local level.
David Tepper,
Inexperience isn't a good teacher.
The trend in golf has been away from penal architecture.
The trend has been to make golf courses "more fair"
If you look at sports in general, they've been dumbed down.
From the hash marks on the football field being moved in, to the walls in the baseball parks being moved in, all to make it easier to score, because in those sports, scoring equals entertainment value, equals dollars.
Low scores in golf do the same.
There's a reason that Pine Valley, GCGC, Seminole and other courses remain so attractive. They haven't caved in to the trend to make golf courses "more fair". They haven't removed their most challenging features and hazards to pander to the broader spectrum of golfer.
We've become soft.
Our "golfing" wills have diminished.
Curiously, Americans make the pilgrimage to the UK to play golf as it was meant to be played, yet, on their home courses, they reject the very features that they traveled thousands of miles and paid thousands of dollars to experience.
I don't know how much experience you've had as a green chairman.
Perhaps none. But, you'd be amazed at the complaints superintendents and green chairman receive from the members.
Here are a few examples that just relate to ONE bunker:
The sand is too hard,
the sand is too soft,
the sand isn't raked,
the sand is raked wrong,
there's too much sand,
there's not enough sand,
the sand isn't evenly distributed.
the sand is wet
the sand is too dry
there's different sand in the sand.
The sand is too fine
The sand is too course
the sand is too bright
the sand is too dull
the sand isn't raked enough
the sand is raked too often.
the rakes are too heavy
the rakes are too light
there aren't enough rakes
there are too many rakes
the rakes should be out of the bunker
the rakes should be in the bunker.
the lip is too high
the lip is too low
the banks are too steep
the banks aren't steep enough
That's just a few of the complaints on just one bunker AND the really important thing to know, is that many of those conflicting complaints come from the same golfer. The only thing that's different is how that bunker treated him or his opponent that given day.
If his opponent putted out of the bunker he wants steeper lips/faces.
If he hit into the bank, he wants the lips/faces reduced.
The overwhelming gist/trend is that the golfer wants to amend the individual features on the golf course to suit his game.
Since most clubs operate under that foolish form of government known as democracy, that golfer will seek to lobby to have the feature that troubles him the most ..... altered. And in doing so, he gains support from his fellow members, if he will support their pet peeves. Soon a groundswell occurs to modify-alter-disfigure the golf course in the name of making it "more fair" to a broader spectrum of golfers.
This is the systemic "dumbing down" of golf courses, which has been and continues to be THE trend in golf.
Ask yourself, over the last 4, 6 or 8 decades, have more bunkers been added or removed from existing golf courses, and to what degree, what ratio ?
WHY do you think that is ?
Why has course after course removed thousands of bunkers while few if any courses have added bunkers ?
Look what happened at Soule Park.
Does that not prove the point ?
As you get older, and hopefully wiser, you'll begin to get it.