Jeff,
I realise that they are broad based generalisations and you can always throw many exceptions at them... but they hold true more often than not I would have thought... plus you overlook that a long desert course with only 90 acres of turf is trumped by a short desert course with only 75 acres of turf... It's all relative...
...I'm really talking about taking the ball back for new courses and the good of the game... But the saving of our classic courses is a huge added benefit...
Ally
As to new cousres, if there are already 17,000 landlocked courses with 100 acres of maintained turf, or 1,700,000 Golf Turf Acres and we build 100 new couses per year that are short enough to save 30 acres of turf each, those 30000 Acres of turf increase golf's "sustainability" by 0.17%. Actually, if the USGA limits ball flights to what we have now (I fear going backwards will really hurt bringing in new play) I would be in favor of that. I am not in favor of rolling it back.
As to "classics" I sense that folks arguing that they haven't changed numerous times already haven't been paying attention. I don't have time to go through the list, but how many Top 100's have hosted tournaments at the same length, or with the same original design? Not Augusta where changes started immediately, Oakand Hills, changed in 1951 in response to pro tour skill, etc.
Yes, Jeff, Augusta has had lots of changes. It is the one course above others where perfection has been a daily goal. (That might not be so good for all of golf course maintainance, but that's another argument.) Still, reversing the nines, perfecting the drainage, adjusting some greens, etc., had teh effect of enhancing the architects' vision. You can't say that about the distance-fighting changes. Trees on 11. Longer rough and pinched fairways. Tees at the far edges of the property.
And yes, Oakland Hills underwent a big change in 1951; it was fortunate in 1951 -- they still had room to move tees then; now they don't. The tees at 2 and 5 and 15 are next to fence-lines. Tees at 11, 18, and 12 are crammed into the adjacent holes. The tee at 8 is a Par-4 walk away from the 7th green.
Riviera is as cramped as Oakland Hills. They were lucky in past years that they had a little room to move tees. No more.
These are big problems -- I'm wondering, Jeff, what's the upside for leaving the status quo ante in golf balls? If you say it is to preserve the recreational player's enjoyment of the game I call b.s. Because the average recreational player doesn't ordinarily buy a premium ball like the Pro V, and doesn't derive any incremental benefit from the Pro V.
I'd be the first to admit that the Pro V has been a terrific invention. That is, if you are Bubba Watson or JB Holmes. It's a funny thing -- I saw Steve Stricker listed in Tour stats from the 1990's as a Top-10 driving distance leader. Where is he now? He's gained some yardage, but he is losing the comparative battle at least in that one statistical category.
Anyway, Jeff, my question for you is why not investigate changes to the golf ball? Why leave it as is? When somebody suggests that people like Mackenzie and Jones, Ross and Max Behr, etc., etc., have been complaining about golf ball distances for decades, does that make them wrong? Why? Why should golf equipment rules foster ever-increasing distances?