I can't help think we already have the basic good model in place. Visit England for two weeks - no need to reinvent the wheel at the risk of coming up with a square one.
Ciao
+1
Lyne and jeff B. and Jason of course make many valid points.
Quite frankly we're all kind've saying the same thing, only different with a different range of experiences.
My one quibble with Jeff B. was his comment (which I may have taken out of context) that designers should attempt to give "the same play experience" from every set of tee markers.
All red, white, blue tee players, regardless of handicap, are not created equal distancewise.
I've seen women who play forward tees who drive it 240 yards, and players who use the white tees drive it 280 yards.
A high handicap doesn't always mean short hitter.
All tees can't be all things to all those who play them.
In our renovation work, the biggest complaints we've gotten have been from the WOMEN who complained that we "dumbed down" the tees after relocating many of them from their original awkward, clear afterthought, positions to more strategic and interesting angles as well as easy to walk to and access.
On one hole, a 290 par 4 from the back tees, when the forward tee was moved to 223 in a much more convenient and improved angle, they howled loudest.
The reality is none at our club would drive that either, but it was a change from the original 276 and all ranges of players complained because it was different.
My comment was that anyone who thought the "dumbed down tee" was too easy, was welcome to play from the forward men's tee located at 270, but at least the shorter hitting women and juniors now had a chance to reach in regulation.
What I'd like to see would be golfers to mix and match tees, and come up with whatever length, variety, and strategy they would like.
Every hole could have two or three sets of tees (rather than 4 or 5), and golfers could choose or staff could provide a thoughtful setup considering all players.
This is impossible though when theres a myth out there that each hole should provide the same play experience for each player, as long as he plays the "right" set of tees.(6 billion players on the planet last I checked)
i.e. a 10 handicap male player can play the same tees as a scratch player on a 180 yard hole, yet on a 490par 4, perhaps he chooses to play from the middle tees at 400.
Using this method, one could devise a 4000 yard course, a 5000 yard course, a 6000 a 7000 yard course,or anything in between, without tees littered all over the place.
The problem with this, most golfers want it dictated to them in the fear that someone in their group will gain some advantage unless it comes on a preprinted scorecard, and a distinctly colored separate set of tees.