JWinick writes:
My main beef with the anti-technologists is the fact that: they subtly accuse us of cheating; their moral superiority; their intent to stop our fun (we are "pro-choice" if you will); and the denigration of the need to know.Funny, I wasn't trying to be subtle.
If others have caddies, or other ways to get yardage, then it is only fair golfers should get to use whatever means necessary to get yardage.
If others have caddies that can read greens, then it is only fair all golfers get electronic devices to read greens.
If Mickelson has a caddy who keeps track of every shot he hits, then it is only fair golfers should have palm pilots that keep track of every aspect of their game.
If Tiger Woods is so good at making eight-footers, it is only fair golfers should get the Einstein putter to help them know when to pull the trigger.
If Bubba Watson can average 315 yards off the tee, it is only fair golfers should be able to buy equipment that allows them to average 315 yards off the tee.
Why should anyone ever have to work at anything? Golf is suppose to be a game, not work.
Shivas writes:
Compared to the examples I've given, calling a cheater line is a piece of CAKE because the guy who uses it actually has one on his ball! What the heck else is it there for?There is an easy solution that retains the spirit of the game. Keep your bluidy hands off the golf ball. The USGA and R&A failed miserably when they started allowing golfers to touch the ball just for the heck of it. It ain't golf.
John Kavanaugh writes:
Now there is an honest man admitting that playing in a cart with no one in front of you is faster than walking.I think I said it a few hundred posts ago in this thread: under optimal conditions, buggies and rangefinders can be quicker than not using them. But most of the time, they slow down the game. The objective is not to make fast golfers faster, but to figure out how to speed up slow golfers. Giving them more gadgets is not the answer.
Cheers,
Dan King
I'm a great believer in luck and I find the harder I work, the more I have of it.
--Thomas Jefferson