Mike,
It seems that many of the changes were Jones' idea, or the result of his bringing in someone like Perry Maxwell. I do wonder how many of those made in the late years of his life were Jones' idea, but either way, they were usually subtle changes, or as Clifford Roberts called them, "improvements." Sure, there were some odd moves and things like the new 16th, but the basic architecture seemed to function awfully well up through 1997, and I guess I find the recent stuff perplexing because it's less consistent with the past "improvements" and so different from what Bobby Jones and MacKenzie and Cliff Roberts had proven to work. The contradictory course changes spin campaign seems to expose their own confusion with what to do as well. (I miss the old days of the Masters week guessing game and arguments over what had been changed!).
Patrick,
This shift in approach has Hootie written all over it, and I know in talking to some people in the know when it comes to Augusta, he and Championship Committee chairman Will Nicholson (former USGA Prez) are taking on the course changes with pleasure. Furthermore, some fans of former chairman Jack Stephens are really perplexed by Hootie's approach, since he was Stephens protege, and Stephens stuck to the traditions...because the traditions worked! Everything about the place, the way it was run, etc.. was perfect. Sure, they had the racial issues which needed fixing and those seem to have been resolved, however, Hootie seems determined to cater to the PC police or to appease the media's annual lame suggestions about expanding the field, longer TV coverage, etc... for what? To be popular? For respect? The Masters wasn't working okay before he came along?
As for golf in general, the anti-tradition, anti-history mindset is bizarre considering how much financial value people place on history. When it comes to actually enjoying, appreciating or building upon the past, the same people who pay $125,000 to join some great old place don't seem to care once they are in the door. So, I'd vote for laziness and just a pure lack of interest in much of anything as the primary culprits when good clubs go bad. Appreciating the past and how knowledge of it can guide you into the future requires a little humility, research and thought, things people seem reluctant to do these days, particularly at many of the upper crust golf clubs. And now, they have Augusta to point to as an example of how to move into the next era in golf...a scary thought.
Geoff