Michael,
If you had a good caddie...yet claim no benefit to your poor game...only a limber back...one of two things ISN"T true. Either you never had a good caddie and worked TOGETHER to play better, or you aren't being fair in your assessment. It CAN"T be both. For no player, regardless of playing ability, would not have SOME benefit to their day, beyond a limber back, if they truly embraced the experience. Your line saying, " I mow my own 1.2 acre yd. and I carry my own bag. And frankly I like being left alone while I do either," is more telling. You really aren't interested in having the caddie dynamic as part of your golf given the choice. No problem.
You are correct that we all find the game in different ways. And we can can all look at it differently. But we can't deny the current, or historical record of caddie golf's contributions. For those that wish to contest that assertion...I'll debate that until the cows come home. It's irrefutable.
Pat,
My response, save two points, was not directed to Niall's comments, but to the issue in general. As you will note, my prior posts were on the Streamsong program. When someone brings my name and attaches assertions to it in a post that doesn't even involve me, I WILL clarify my position.
John,
I found the game as a caddie and no avenue in my life has given me more. It certainly has not been massive financial gain of any great degree. I have the membership of my original club, Radnor Valley CC, which sadly no longer has caddies at all, to thank for believing in supporting caddie golf, and scholarships for deserving youth that had the academics and financial need. The money I earned working there and other clubs, coupled with a partial caddie scholarship awarded by the J. Wood Platt Scholarship Trust for my dedicated efforts, enabled me to attend and graduate from West Virginia University. I know the value and am determined to support caddie golf for many reasons, but that one alone deserves my commitment to share what it can deliver.
Your wide range of views on caddie golf often baffle me. You support it heartily on one hand and then degrade or mock aspects of it on the other. Caddie golf is like EVERY other endeavor on the face of the earth. It has good elements and bad. But the over-arching contributions to the game...and in its highest presentation...society...are greater than ANY other facet of golf.
In closing, let's all forget the" BUSINESS of golf" component for a moment...that mantra has injected a lot of poison into the game, GREED the principle element, that has robbed it of much of what it should be.
It is a damn tough sport. It isn't a cheap date to present or play, regardless of the model. It WILL NEVER be for everyone. By its nature, it shouldn't be getting exponentially larger, or have ever-greater acreage consumption for the sake of satisfying industry profit centers...when EVERYONE else in a responsible world community is recognizing that we need to become MORE efficient and REDUCE resource consumption.
Even a dumb caddie can figure this out...so what's wrong at the top?!
Niall,
Why the fixation with cost? Just like food...you get what you pay for. You want greatness at McDonald's prices. It doesn't generally work that way. Not every golf experience is a la carte either. Sorry.
Where do you think MANY who laid out, or then built a great many of those epic courses... found the game? From Old Tom on...
As a second to the prior point, a quick look today finds Mr. Doak, Mr. Hanse, and the C&C duo all doing highly-acclaimed, significant GCA projects. Each of these three teams have been touched by caddie golf influences that have shaped some of their thinking on design. Most also have a caddie dynamic as part of the various facility presentions. I know, it's all nonsense. Keep trying sport!
Cheers,
Kris
Your