I think it's interesting to read these comments that if the equipment were rolled back it would "kill the game of golf".
I honestly don't understand this kind of thinking.
Who is going to quit the game if they can no longer hit a 340 yard drive and have to settle for 285?
Who is going to quit the game if they can no longer hit a 9 iron 170 yards? Or a flip wedge into practically every par four. Or routinely get on every par 5 in two?
Are duffers going to quit because they lose some yardage? Geez. We've got bigger fish to fry. Like staying in the fairway and out of the bunkers.
How many people playing now are "good" only because of the hot ball and hot faced clubs? Not many, I would venture.
IMHO, good golfers will remain good golfers with equipment constrained to keep distances within the design parameters of existing golf courses. As long as we are all playing with the same equipment (in other words, FORGET ABOUT bifurcation), relative wonderfulness is maintained.
If some golfers would quit because the equipment is rolled back, I would say "good riddins". There will be others to fill in the void. And golf would be restored to the game that it was designed to be. Tournaments would be MUCH more interesting than the bomb and gouge routine seen on tour today.
The main losers in this scenario would be the equipment manufacturers, who have become the tail that wags the dog. They could no longer advertise that their clubs are "longer" than the competition. TOUGH LUCK. Equipment manufacturers will just have to find other "differentiators" to lure consumers. I'm sure they can come up with something. And if their profitability declines, so be it. The game isn't run for the benefit of the manufacturers. (Or at least it shouldn't be.)