Matt, thanks for your reply to my earlier question. It is certainly true that driving the ball a long way is part and parcel of golf, but as a lot of the recent responses on this thread would indicate, there are a lot of folks out here have issues with how much easier the current equipment is to hit long and straight, and dubious about what that means for currently existing courses and on the construction of courses in the future. On one level I certainly agree with you - asking the longer driver to work the ball is a good thing, but the last thing I want is for golf to turn into a "long driving contest," so bringing up that competition in regards to a certain brand of equipment makes me, perhaps illogically, want to stay as far away from that brand as possible ! Golf has traditions and history, and one of the ironies of the sport is that by and large folks love game improvement technology for their own game, and decry what it does to golf's tradition and history on a larger scale and the top echelons of the sport. I'm not smart enough to come up with an answer for that issue.
And one comment I liked in Tom Doak's interview was his comment about the 4th at Barnbougle, and how if it was measured in yards as it would have been up here, someone might have wanted it stretched a bit to be over 300 yards, but that down there it didn't matter. Why is that? Why are certain numbers so important up here, to Americans, I presume? Is it marketing only, or is a different way of looking at the game? Is match play more common down under? It just seems to me that absolute distance norms and other issues like "fairness" become less important as match play becomes more predominant.