I disagree with that. Especially given what Bridgestone has done in the past few years. Their B330 series has balls that are hard cored for high swing speed players and others that have softer cores for better players who don't swing as fast. Add to that their E series which has balls for the even slower swing speed players to gain distance with less spin.
Johnj,
As you said above, prove it. Do you have any proof that the Bridgestones or any other swing-speed tailored ball flies further for the slow swinger than the state of the art balls (Balata's, professionals, etc.) before the distance boom? While it makes for a good advertisement I don't believe it. I have seen or experienced nothing to convince me otherwise.
Granted, these balls may work better for the slow swinger than the Pro Vx type balls. But better than what was used before? I am very doubtful. So far as I can see, the fast swinging golfer has reaped a huge distance dividend and these swing speed specific balls do little or nothing to change this. Maybe they will in the future, but I am not sure they can provide a similar distance bump for the short hitter without violating the USGA rules for ball distance at the faster end.
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It is moronic when two -3 index players, one a long hitter and one a short hitter, do not fit well on the same golf course from the same tees.
David,
Could you elaborate on this question please? What specific example are you referencing?
Thanks.
A few ideas behind that statement (which was in response to someone's claim it was moronic to change things for 0.001%.)
1. It is inaccurate to characterize the out of control distance as only mattering at the very top end (the supposed 0.001%.) Anyone with a reasonably fast swing speed has reaped some sort of benefit relative to the slower swingers. And there are many marginal golfers with fast swing speeds. They exist all through the single digit index players and even higher.
2. The flip-side is some excellent golfers with slow swing speeds have become much shorter off the tee relative to the long hitters of similar general ability. (And not-so good-golfers got shorter relative to other not-so-good golfers.)
3. This imbalances the architecture in ways that go well beyond just total distance of courses. It is very difficult build or even set-up a course so it works well for slow and fast swinging players of similar abilities. If features are in play for one, they are likely entirely irrelevant to the other. Any sort of forced carry long enough to be remotely interesting to the long hitter will be unplayable to the short hitter. Courses long enough to challenge the long hitter would be death marches for the short hitter. If they fit the short hitter, they are wedge after wedge for the longer players. Etc.