See my post a few weeks ago about my recent experience in playing at 6200 yards rather than my customary 67-6800. A blast and I wonder if more folks thought about fun rather than what tour pros shoot, design might be a lot different.
As a short hitter with a single digit index, married to a short hitting 10.something index, all this BS about multiple tees being a waste is starting to piss me off.
As Alice Dye has pointed out, on most golf courses, men have two, or three, tees that allow them to play a game with the kind of balance Shivas mentioned. My wife rarely has such options.
For my game, If I am smart about it, I can find tees that allow me to play a game in which at least 2/3 of my strokes are full shots.
Since I hit it barely over 200 yards, those tees are somewhere in the area of 6,000 yards. (Sadly, too many courses even those with five sets, have one set at 5,750 and one at 6,300)
At 6,400-plus, I inevitably have a procession of holes that play like unreachable par fives. IOW, Driver--fairway wood--short iron, which is BORING. Worse, I get holes like #4 at Firekeeper or #10 at Sand Creek Station where there's a pretty good chance I'll have to hit three wood shots to advance the ball before I start actually "playing golf."
Hell, when I played Sand Creek, I had to lay up 300 yards from the green with my second shot.
Don't EVEN get my wife started on how much fun it is for someone who drives it 170-odd yards to play a 5,800-yard golf course--like many of the golden age courses are from the forward tees.
What the naysayers forget is that 70-80 years ago, a woman like my wife could count on 50-60 yards of roll on her tee shots. These days, green, soggy courses take that away from her.
One of my best memories of Scotland on our only trip was her hitting a driver off the deck on the ninth at Royal Dornoch. She was at least 225 yards out and hit one about head high that rolled, and rolled leaving her a 25-foot eagle putt. She turned to me and said, "I LOVE a fast golf course."
At our home course, the new owners removed the markers and redid the scorecard, eliminating a set of 4,800-yard markers that were only a year old. She tried, in vain, to get them to put down plates like those shown here, and they refused. That among some other things they've done, may be enough to get us to leave Kansas for good.
K