Sean Arble,
I had a conversation with a fellow who was about to become a green chairman at a course I'm very familiar with.
He mentioned that he wanted to narrow the fairways. (they had already been narrowed, twice, when the original automated irrigation system was introduced decades ago, and again, when its replacement was introduced)
I asked him why he wanted to narrow the fairways.
He said, "to make the course harder". I said "why" ? He said, "because the course had gotten easier with the new hi-tech equipment." Then I asked how many golfers broker 80 in the club championship qualifier the previous year. He didn't know, so I told him, only one player. Then I said, "so if only one of our best golfers can break 80, why do you want to make the course harder ?"
He had no answer.
The problem is, every golfer, when watching a PGA Tour event on TV hears the announcer say how holes were narrowed and/or lengthened in order to retain its defenses against the best golfers in the world, and automatically club Presidents and Green Chairman think they have to bolster the architectural defenses at their club by lengthening and/or narrowing the fairways.
The particular club has greens that sit at unique angles, angles that have been lost over the years due to narrowing.
Now, the best angle to come in from has a bunker, heavy rough or trees where fairway used to be.
It's winter, get out the chain saws. The mowers and dirt can wait until spring (;