In my just posted "In My Opinion" piece, I begin assessing the current decline in the American golf industry by referring to Jack Nicklaus, who has recently claimed that golf is too expensive, too hard, and takes too much time. As a result, Jack is spending most of his time designing golf courses in Asia. Many of his peers in the golf course development and design business are finding themselves less active here or are joining him in seeking work in the developing markets of Asia and South America. Golf course architecture can no longer be considered a vigorous profession here, if we look at the very small amount of new building. Over the past several years since the economic meltdown of 2007-2008, we've been opening about 1 new course for every 10 that close down. Those numbers are very distressing -- low teens being built, hundreds being closed annually -- and only suggest the agony of an industry in which many course operations are struggling to survive by instituting unsustainable business practices.
"Growing the game" seems an illusion these days, as the businesses and organizations that service and manage the game have painted themselves into corners where most Americans can only infrequently venture. Much of the industry's decline has to do with the many very difficult courses built in the past half-century, "championship" courses that were so focused on challenging the pros that everyday Joe Member gets little enjoyment, but plenty of pain and humiliation, out of a round. The great expense of maintaining such courses has rendered many of them unsustainable. Millions of golfers are playing fewer rounds in recent years, while many are actually quitting the game altogether, as their clubs close down, their bodies age and break down, and country club memberships are so costly as to be expendable or converted into social or sports memberships, rather than full club memberships. Even daily fee courses throughout the nation must charge players amounts that resemble the car payments they made when they first took up the game.
Moreover, the reasons Jack Nicklaus cites are not going away. The costs of learning and equipping oneself for golf are beyond the means of many retirees and older players, whose retirement incomes have been rocked by the tumult in the stock markets this century. Despite all the advances in technology and all the extra yards club manufacturers promise annually, even semi-annually, the game remains as hard for most players today as it was over the past several decades. Paying big bucks to take a beating on golf courses designed for "championship" play seems less enticing for mature players who've gained some control over their egos and illusions. For younger folks, the generally stagnant wage scales during this time have made "disposable income" seem an anachronistic curiosity. Paying off college loans and saving for a down payment have been recurrent themes -- not to say thorns in the flesh -- in the lives of the young, educated demographic the industry has usually counted on to become regular golfers. Family duties in the homes of two working parents leave far less time for golf, especially when American life is filled with recreational opportunities that are cheaper, easier, and take far less time than a round of golf during a day at the country club.
So, tune in to my "In My Opinion" article and join the discussion. Have the trends of the past several years and the foreseeable global economic and environmental conditions begun to turn golf once again into a recreational activity that only the wealthy and the leisure classes in America can enjoy? Or are there credible forces in golf that can indeed manage to make the game accessible to the many? Will golf become once again like polo and yacht racing? Or will the promise that Tiger seemed to create just a couple of decades ago, of introducing newer and younger players to the game, still be realized? And is the devolution -- a game for the C.B. MacDonald Millionaires clubs -- a healthy or an unhealthy development? What role can golf course architecture play in reversing this trend? Do you know of efforts to preserve, if not necessarily grow, the game that you can identify and share on this thread? I'm eagerly listening!