After reading Scotland's Gift last night and the extensive notations CBM has about the ball's devlopment in that book, I think this:
1. The explosion of golf, to which the Haskell ball contributed mightily, after 1900 was already damned to a commercial component. CBM recounts a story that illustrates that almost the very moment the Haskells were introduced there were proprietary debates for how the first players and tinkerers were modifying and shortly thereafter scored (the beginning of dimples) in different patterns and molds calling their modification a distinct new thing that owed nothing but a thank you to Haskell.
1a. So for me there is no going back to change any key moment when Golf distance or accuracy could have slowed down. There was always to be a proprietary controversy to erupt when standardization was thought to be applied. A game born on the very ethos of invention does not take well to such regualtion.
2. Going forward my crazy idea is that the USGA, the R & A, the PGAs of the globe invite the Ball manufacturers to summit and propose to them the following:
A. The championship, governing bodies will issue technical specifications for a tournament ball that addresses the many concerns of the the modern ball's properties, to all Ball manufacturers who accept the invitation to summit.
B. Those Ball manufacturers will be charged to develop a unique, or adopt an existing shared, common method of manufacture to meet those specifications and produce Golf Balls of identical character, only unalike in that they were produced by the machines of several different companies using the same materials and engineering method on which they have agreed. e.g. Titleist and Callaway produce a ball that meets the specs and tests the same.
C. Once developed, produced and properly tested, the governing bodies will implement the ball for all championships they themselves conduct or sanction. Local golf associations, clubs, courses, foursomes, partners and singles will be on their own and will still be able to choose whether or not to use this ball for their own activities.
D. Every other ball currently sold by every manufacturer may be sold commercially and used in any provincial setting as may be, however the new "tournament ball" - which will carry a special insignia of "Tourney Approved" - will still come sold side by side with other brands of the "tournament ball" but they are all the same so the allegiance is product loyalty not verified performance - Titleist, Callaway, dunlop, Srixon, whatever...every pro shop will carry every participating manufacturer's issuance of the tournament ball as one of their product lines, but people wanting a tournament ball would be emotionally choosing which one - there would be a verified absence of difference in performance as the method they use is the same...Think of just one more choice in any manufacturer of golf ball...now there's a Pro VX999 that you have to use if you're playing in a US Open or State Open.
E. On the elite tournament side, thsi would also allow the professional players to not break allegiance with their manufacturer's promotional contracts and perhaps at those tournaments the balls used can come from the governing body...
F. i think the whole idea for the Future is to get golf balls into the commercial model of that tennis contains...even though in tennis the ball is shared by the players...in Tennis, Wilson or Penn don't get mad because Slazenger is the ball they use at Wimbledon...they know that people who are playing the sport in everyday life are using whatever they want...so it should be for Golf if not moreso. Because the impact of the elite tournaments on everyday golf requires a bigger and more costly tennis court to play on and influences classic courses to become quirky brutes...we're actually losing something in that...a connection to the essence of the game as it devloped.
cheers
vk