I had thought this topic had dried up and moved on to page 2. Guess someone brought it back.
I see the "distance issue" as having three possible "solutions." Since I’ve spent time in each "of" the camps, I’ll try my "best" to go "through" each. (When you read that, be sure to really emphasise the words in quotes. Pause before and after and really put weight on the words! Bopping your head up and down helps.)
Note: I do have a bias that will probably influence my choices of arguments in each of the categories. My bias is that I hate the pro game and what it has done to golf.
One option is do nothing. This is the option of those of us brimming with confidence that tomorrow the world will be a better place. We tend to be libertarian, believe in globalization, and love the free market. We also tend to be prettier than those that support the other two options.
Sure there is a "distant issue" but we think it will resolve itself over time.
Obviously this is the cheapest option and the one that will make the fewest number of lawyers rich.
This is my newest argument, do nothing and let the game take care of itself. I’m not entirely consistent with my do nothing choice. The USGA could change the rules to allow for Committees to mandate balls with different specifications than the current USGA specs.
The cons are that the "distant issue" will continue to be a problem for the Best Players in the World (BPitW.) They will continue to make mincemeat of the great old courses, causing the great courses to look for more yardage or for the BPitW to take their balls and look for other places to play.
Since I want to see a more pronounced separation between BPitW and the rest of us, I encourage them to find elsewhere to play. I hope someday in the not to distant future they will play virtual golf and stop messing up real golf courses.
Next option is competition ball. This has been discussed on this topic rather heavily. The biggest argument against this idea is that it creates two sets of rules.
With all the local rules the tours now play, there are already two sets of rules. The number of times the PGA Tour play the ball down is getting fewer every year. BPitW not touching their golf ball between every shot is becoming the exception. They want to play their version of hand-ball-golf, fine. I don’t want their game.
I’d prefer we get back to a game of learning to accept situations. Let the pros play their game based on “fairness.”
Two sets of rules, cool, bring ‘em on.
The last option is the rollback of the ODS. I still don’t see how that could possibly work. Each generation of BPitW are going to be a bit better than the previous.
TEPaul’s answer is to base the ODS on something like 150 mph swing speed so that it will take into account numerous generations of BPitW.
That idea will cause me to bolt from the USGA. With my measly 90 mph swing speed (A number that is probably above average) if I’m going to stick with USGA rules I’ll be batting around a marshmallow that won’t go 200 yards with my best swing.
Sure, length is all relative, but dropping back the ODS doesn’t mean courses are going to suddenly get shorter. We end up with courses were the BPitW play as the designer intended, and the rest of us, the majority, are playing like old men.
I’ll be saying goodbye to the USGA in my own way. Playing outlawed balls from outlawed tees. [Braveheart]
"You want to find an outlaw, hire an outlaw. You want to find a Dunkin' Donuts, call a cop."
--Randall "Tex" Cobb (Leonard Smalls in Raising Arizona)