Jim,
Just for you, I took a quick look at the LPGA stats. They didn't experience anything like the distance jumps seen on the men's side. I guess there must have been a glass ceiling on optimization and fitness in 2003.
Is it not eye opening to you that half (or less) of the Titleist guys on Tour switched to the X?
Not at all. This has been my point from the beginning. That ball only benefited those with extremely high swing speeds who were looking to "optimize" by decreasing spin.
But is it eye opening for you? If not even the all of the top golfers swing hard enough (and with enough spin) to benefit from this ball, do you really think the average golfer is benefitting from this new technology? Wasn't that your point earlier? That a rollback of this type of technology would make golf less fun for the other 150 golfers? So how would getting rid of balls that only benefit the elite of the elite hurt average golfers or make the game less fun? Please don't tell me again how you think Dustin Johnson could hit it just as far with a less "optimal" ball. I am asking about the average golfer.
How would the average golfer be hurt if the ProV1x was deemed non-conforming?
In your chart above, how much yardage do you think it's fair to attribute to optimization? It's greater than 0, right?
I couldn't put a number on it, and I don't really think your question makes much sense. I refuse to pretend optimization was suddenly invented in the month between 2002 and 2003. The numbers for
both 2002 and 2003 reflect distances with "optimized" equipment. The big difference is these golfers on the chart had a better ball choice for their "optimization" in 2003. Is it possible there were some improvements in other aspects of optimization in 2003? Sure, but it is impossible to unwind them from the change in the ball. If you think otherwise, feel free to try to support that with some actual facts.
For example, you could go back and look at the players who had switched to the ProV1 (or comparable balls) in 2001 or 2002, but not to the ProV1x (or comparable balls) in 2003. If you do, what you will find you is that these golfers did not experience the kind of distance gains as did those who switched. So was this some
special edition "optimization?" Limited only to those who switched to the ProV1x?
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Bryan, I used an indoor launch monitor which presumably based its calculation on ball speed and spin. It would be interesting to know the degree to which a balata could be "optimized." While it doesn't directly answer that question, the trackman data you posted might hint at the major hurdle of such efforts for high swing speeds, while at the same time suggesting a reason why recent the technological advances in the ball help don't really help the average players. At slower swing speeds, it is "optimal" to have relatively more spin on the ball, and at higher swing speeds it is "optimal" to have less. So who does a low a spin ball benefit?