Dan writes:
Tony Ristola writes:
Paul and other anti-Toy proponents,
Where do you put caddies in this equation then?
They offer more input than just yardage.
Hypothetical: On a course you haven't played, you're in a match... one guy has a caddy, the other a yardage guide... you're playing to "win"; what's the difference between the two?
Just curious.
I want the slippery slope to end.
We keep getting all these gadgets because your side says you allow this, therefore you must allow that. You even use the claim that all these various gadgets and tools will speed up play. We were told years ago buggies, yardage books, yardage on sprinklers, 150 yard stakes, signage, etc... will speed up play. You fooled some of us before. But I'm really not as stupid as I look. These gadgets, just like all the other improvements will slow down the game.
Adam writes:
Tony, You must've misunderstood me.
You seem to be stuck on the caddy question.
I am not against caddies.
I'm not interested in winning at golf. That's impossible. Pro Tournament play is not golf, and, as Dan has clearly articulated, it is a major cause for the deplorable speed at which many play.
I've golfed with Dan on a MOnday at SFGC. It was caddy day. There was one hanging around the first tee looking for a job. Dan hired him on the spot. I leaned on him only for yardages from the center of the fairways, but not until I had told him my guess. It was a great way to learn Tillie's tricks in deceiving the eye.
This thread is about devices, equating them to caddies is insulting to caddies.
JK is the only one allowed to be insulting, here. Wink
END
Now, it's rare for me to disagree with you two, but here I will.
I am stuck on the use of caddies question. Because the provide more assistance than a yardage guide or laser. So:
Caddies are aids. Yes they are human, and to err is human, but a good caddy is a human yardage guide, clubbing guide (something a yardage guide won't offer, and something you'd get a penalty for if asking a playing partner) with an abundance of interactive features to plug into. Think a good caddy at Broadmoor wouldn't save you a bunch of strokes around the greens... accelerate the learning curve? In this vein, anyone playing with a good caddy on an unfamiliar course can club you at key moments where there is blindness, sufficient elevations changes, and around the greens. They know the hidden secrets, and will unlock them for you.
Yardage guides and aids only give a distance. They can't account for elevation changes or how local conditions will play on the shot at hand.
Yardage guides and distance assistance are cheap deaf-mute caddies.
So... if you are for the elimination of assistance, caddies must also be thrown out. They began this slippery slope... of instant information accumulation.
Adam: Why even ask for the yardages at SFGC? You denied yourself all the joy of being deceived during that round and the following round.
Why even take a caddy?