A few years ago I was involved in a lengthy conversation here debating whether really difficult greens brought the lesser putter and the superior putter closer together. IN other words, place us both 30 feet from the hole on a flat smooth green and the good putter will average something below 2 putts while the bad putter might average 2.5 or something. Take them to Oakmont and the good putter will make fewer putts and three putt more and the bad putter will still three putt a lot but will manage some two putts, I couldn't fathom how that was possible as it would be the only activity in the entire human world in which, as conditions get more and more difficult the more skilled participant struggles relatively more than the less skilled participant. Huckaby, if you're lurking please reiterate your position if I've messed it up.
Seems plausible.
The superior putter has more "downside" potential. The inferior putter will always have 3-putts--he just may have more on greens like Oakmont's.But how many more than normal can he have?
But the superior putter rarely 3-putts-- his handful of 3-putts takes him farther away from his "norm".
So,the inferior putter gets a little worse than his norm but the superior putter gets much worse than his--in effect,the inferior putter has gained on the superior.
Huckaby,you out there?
As soon as I saw this thread, I knew someone would recall our battle royale from more than a few years ago. (My good friend Huck hasn't posted in a long time - too too long - but that's a battle for another day.)
I'm with Sully, and thus against JME, and must now seek him out for a fight to the death.
There is no way to make a golf course more difficult on better players and not commensurately so for the lesser golfer, stat games not to the contrary. Even pure randomness, I believe, will still favor the better player, as he will handle it better, almost by definition. I believe Rich Goodale was also a heathen who believed that bumpy greens favored lesser players. I will travel to fight him as well... Heck, John K agreed with them, that's enough to discredit their cause!
Now, having said all that, I think there will always be golfers who mis-read results. They get on a green in regulation, versus someone else who doesn't, and when the other guy beats them, they assume the green was "unfair", without taking the time to acknowledge perhaps they were in the wrong place on said green.
In Pete Dye's wonderful autobiography, he says sometimes it's better to be in a bunker on his course than on the wrong side of a green. I suspect the golfers I am talking about in my post would think that is sheer madness, madness, I tells you!