So why is this practice accepted?
When did it start?
Do Super's and people in charge of agronomy just "love the way it looks"? Is it not about providing the best playing field possible?
Is it not about how the course play's before it looks? I am talking about so called GREAT courses.
Tom Doak said:
"I like any sort of existing ground cover where you can find a ball and play it. That includes woods when there is a relatively clean forest underneath, heather if it isn't too thick, sparse grasses that are unmowed, or turfgrass that's generally maintained at two inches or less.
I don't like "native" rough that is so thick that you can't find your ball in it or play a shot out of it. And I really don't like it when new golf courses plant such rough and create the problem for themselves."
All these intiatives to "save the game"-- Tee it forward-- how bout CUT IT LOWER 3.0!!
I watch hunderds of rounds a year destroyed by nasty, overgrown nonesense.
Go put a junior on a golf course lined with "fescue", or better yet, host a junior tournament. How is that growing the game? How do we expect juniors to become seniors when their time on the golf course is miserable because they've lost a ball on every hole, and didn't really hit it that bad?