I agree with Ron in many respects. First, golf distance is a lot like taxes ( in that we want the OTHER guy to pay through the nose, but leave our money/distance alone)
Also, the sky has been falling as long as I can remember (oh my god, what if a black man played in the masters, for one. It was one of the all time great moments in sports, thank you) You get the idea. How do we know we are "right" this time, when the prophets of doom have been proven wrong so many times before? And, if you guys really do have the secrets of the universe, why has no one told me?
Speaking entirely architecturally, I know all you guys shout the mantra of "preserving original intent" at all costs, but I always imagine a scene from the Woody Allen movie, where the patrons are discussing the deep meaning of a directors intent in the lobby. Of course, he appears and tells them he was drunk and stuck for an ending so an assistant put it in!
And I guarantee you, if this was a Rees Jones design, the text here would go "Oh, another boomerang green on nine at Augusta. We are getting SO sick of seeing that green from one of the most popular architects of the day. Why can't he do something ORIGINAL, rather than copying past successes?"
Even if all the "lost shots" like the putt around the corner on nine were restored, who would play them? As I recall, most changes were made with input of the "target audience" - guys with names like Hogan, Nicklaus and Palmer, who probably knew something about the game being played, no? Certainly, problems were encountered that the prime audience didn't like. A large green that produces, shall we say, unusual shots, was frowned upon by the greatest minds of the time. Are we so cock sure that we have those minds beat, hands down, in our current philosophical thinking? If so, I could probably cite several large historical blunders caused by similar arrogance.
I only know two things about those "dissapointing" articles. First, while we are goofy enough to put our opinions up here for free, at least someone thinks enough of Ron's opinion to actually pay him for it
and second, the changes aren't gonna stop, just like my getting older isn't going to stop, so the best way to deal with it is a personal "attitude adjustment".
Frankly, anyone calling for pure restoration of this course in particular would probably sleep better just thinking of it as an architecture museum, rather than a one time piece of artwork that was ripped from the walls of a museum and damaged.