Why do you care that people with more money and ego than brains, build courses that will be more expensive to build/sustain than necessary? If the market won't support it it will just go bankrupt and the following owners will dial it down. Why is it USGA's job to stop stupid people from making stupid decisions?
Richard,
Why do you care that we care?
If you're comfortable with the ball, and it doesn't bother you that every time a major goes to a classic course it is bastardized,good on you.
If you don't care that the costs of the game are driven up by the need for more real estate for lengthening and/or safety corridors, good on you.
You are 100% entitled to your opinion and you can vote with your dollars.
No one's saying the game's too easy, just that the corridors required have to be larger, for a lot more than .01%. I teach several 15 handicappers that hit it 300 yards, often 50-60 yards off line. Big difference between a ball hit 300 ,60 yards off line, and a ball hit 270, 50 yards off line.
A good attorney will advise a course owner he needs more room -that's not a stupid person making a stupid decision-they do plenty of that on their own
.
The USGA is the self appointed rulesmaker of the game.
They made rules for a reason, and equipment rules specifically to make golf a game of skill.
Innovation has always been a part of the game, lately it's just accelerated.
The equipment manufacturers found a way to innovate faster than the USGA could regulate, it happens in all sports.
Other sports have responded by adjusting rules accordingly.
I'm completely stunned that people can be against anchoring, which causes no change to our fields of play at any level, yet be in support of balls and equipment that go farther every year, driving change to the fields of play for a variety of reasons, including misguided narrowing of corridors in the name of "protection of par"
, safety, pace of play, etc.
Talking about it is a start; us rollback freaks may find out we're a minority, and the talk will go away.
Or perhaps we're not, and dialogue is a positive beginning.
As Brent says, it took the USGA 10 years to aknowledge the ball went farther, then decided it was too late to do anything (unless of course it's a putting technique that's been around 20-30 years)
Put another way, I think golf would be better on a 6900 yard course with greens and tees proportionately closer vs. a 7500 yard course with tees and greens proportionately farther apart, using a ball that goes 10% shorter, and playing whatever tees one wants to. You still have to walk by the back tees, unless they're making you walk backwards, which is even worse.
In a world fighting for additional leisure time, only golf is expanding its real estate needs and wondering why it tales longer to walk and play 10% more real estate.
Will we still say golf is evolving when elite players are driving it 500 yards?
Guess it will help me with wedge sales though