I understand a need to change with the times and technology but it has gone way to far. The course was at its prime in the 80s in 90s in my opinion. Then Augusta National got scared that their course was being overpowered which I really dont believe to be the case in reality. Tiger ripped it apart one year (1997). No one else was close to him that year. So what? Just because one man plays really well all of a sudden they called in the bulldozers and planted more trees. All courses need 'tweaking' but ANGC got a bit carried away.
Tony:
Those involved in the Masters set-up say it was more Mickelson's length -- particularly a wedge into #11 -- that drove them to make the changes at Augusta, and not as much Tiger's -18 in '97.
Augusta National has always been tweaked for the Masters. The notion that it has played, in tournament conditions, nearly identically from its inception to 1997 is, I think, misguided.
For the record, in the 1980s, the course had only two winners finish at -10 or lower -- Seve (playing maybe his best golf ever; he was leading by 10 strokes going into the back nine on Sunday before letting some strokes go) at -13 in 1980, and Crenshaw in 1984 at -11. The average winning score in the 1980s -- absent those two years -- was -6.2, a pretty stringent test of par. Of course, many golf fans fondly recall those tournaments, because of exciting finishes (three playoffs, the Mize chip-in to top Norman, Lyle out of the bunker on 18, Nicklaus' back-nine charge), but the scores weren't all that low.
Yes, the average winning score in the 1990s dropped noticeably -- -11.5 on average was the winning score. I'd suggest three reasons (in no particular order) -- ball and club technology, the rise and depth of top-flight international players like Faldo, Woosnam, Olazabal, and Langer (which deepened the Masters field to a much greater extent than it was during the 1970s and 1980s), and an unusual run of benign weather conditions, that produced nearly ideal scoring conditions (seriously -- Augusta has had some very tough weather conditions the past decade, and it had a bunch in the 1960s and 1970s).
I'd argue those who want the great ying-and-yang of the Masters -- birdies and eagles possible, bundled (often in the same hole!) with the possibility of bogey or worse -- should look at the last two years of the tournament. I'd suggest those in charge of setting up the Masters, after the initial getting-used-to-the-changes phase for the pros, has worked out -- -12 and -16 the past two years.