And this is probably a repeat of what I have said before as well...
But my whole point is that as new technology has come out over the years, some golf courses have either closed or had to rebuild. It happens. I think the wound balata had a rather long lifespan, something like 50-60 years without a significant change in craftsmanship or technology. We are just now at the frontside of a new change in golf balls. Is it really the end of the world? I think not. Its simply evolution. (As for other technology such as exotic heads and $1000 shafts, I won't go there)
John, let's just take the issue of golf balls in that case...
I don't for one moment suggest going back to old designs of golf balls -- wound cores, balata covers, etc. We may find that technology in the Pro V era has something to offer the recerational player. (For the most part, however, all evidence that I know of suggests that the Pro V was a much bigger aid to elite-level players.)
And I don't object to to new ball designs. But as far as scaling them to existing courses, that seems to me to be both:
~entirely arbitrary, inasmuch as all games are essentially arbitrary constructions, and merely devoted to encouraging a certain kind of play and certain sporting venues (100-yard football field, 10-foot baskets, 60' 6" mound-to-plate baseball), AND
~amenable to careful and evolutionary standards. Above, we remarked that golf balls are not suddenly being "regulated to death." They have ALWAYS been regulated, and the regs have ALWAYS evolved. Don't forget size and weight restrictions, which have changed over the years. And the changes in USGA testing equipment, in the modern era.
It won't surprise me one bit if there are new golf ball developments, provoking revised technical standards, in 2015, and again in 2025, and 2055, etc. And players in those future times will probably no more caer about the Pro V1 per se, than we now care about Ben Hogan's Spalding Dot or Harry Vardon's Haskell ball. I care much more about the courses; the historical continuity to be found at Merion or at St. Andrews, where Hogan and Vardon played, than any consistency or inconsistency in their equipment, particularly golf balls.
Can I ask you, John, what is the harm to the game in any ball rollback, presuming that such a rollback is largely imperceptible to the vast majority of recreational players? How is a rollback anything but beneficial to the game in that instance? In asking this, I am specifically and avowedly excluding the interest of Acushnet and the Fortune Brands stock price. My judgment is to elevte the interest and history of the game over any claimed, and unproven, harm to Titleist.