Garland,
Sorry I missed your last post.
Not sure if riders or walkers makes a difference in how much the women enjoy hitting more greens like "real golfers" do. But, I guess it would be the national average of 55-60% cart riders.
Hyperbole? I believe, as per my post above, you are engaging in it more. As I said, I see you presenting "facts" that don't jive with my experience in the field.
Golf has always had trouble attracting female players, and is on one of its repeated efforts to figure out what is wrong. No one studying the situation has heard a group of women say the game is too easy, and ID's that as the problem.
Some issues seem to be:
Time consumed/Speed of play,
Not feeling welcome on the course,
Condescending attitudes by men,
Poor design for their games, (not just length, but unplayable shots)
Too few females on staff,
Cleanliness of restrooms
Poor shopping experience/bad fashion choices (think Nordstroms with a golf course outside - laugh, but its true)
Guy oriented menu choices
As far as I can tell, the condescending attitude of "thats good enough for you, maam" is the number one contributor.
Going back to your original, if somewhat non connected point regarding match play, I do agree that the biggest reasons for faster play in Scotland is the proxmity of tees to greens AND match play, which allows those who duff a few to just pick up and start fresh the next hole. If you wanted to assert that match play is better than stroke play for that reason alone, the thread would have been over, as far as I'm concerned.
I still believe that many of those matches would be more exciting if on length appropriate courses. Think of hitting the fw bunker. Seems as if the brilliant recovery is more possible from 125 yards than 200, where a 3 Iron might not clear the lip, etc.