At what point in our history did green speeds over take importance of green interest?
Presumably it was when golfers started evincing a preference for putting on fast greens instead of slow ones.
You can make more 20-foot putts on a smooth, subtly-contoured green Stimping 12 than you can on a smooth, somewhat more boldly contoured green Stimping 9. Making 20-foot putts is fun and memorable.
Ask any golfer after he walks off the course about his round. He will quickly tell you about any and every putt over 15 feet that he happened to make that day. By contrast, doing a good job of two-putting wildly breaking putts on a severely contoured, slow-rolling green is fun but not as instantly memorable.
Good players (or good putters at least) are now addicted to making putts on fast, flattish greens. They are never going to choose to go back. Lesser players tend to take their cues from the better ones, often to their own detriment.
P.S. Or put another way, the great mass of golfers prefer to have their nerves and touch tested by very fast green speeds than having their stroke and imagination tested by bold contours.
Wow, Hutto. You (as you often, but not always do) nailed it. It's just a preference thing. BOTH types of greens can be a blast to put on, both super fast and moderately contoured and slow as molasses, but boldy contoured. I would love to see the USGA and the PGA Tour do away with "standards" when it comes to green speeeds. The only thing we should be looking for in tournament conditions is TRUE greens. They can be 9 or 14. The closer they are to 8 or 9, the more bold the contours can be. That's fun in my book. It's fun to have a three foot putt with two cups of break. And if you try to "jam it in" and play right edge and get a bit "twitchy," then you have a six foot comebacker, just like you would on a 13 stimp green if you play inside the cup and miss when you should play two balls out.
Bottom line: Pros hate looking "stupid," so they will continue to insist on green speeds that are all in a narrow range (11 to 13 for the most part) and bunker conditions that are IMMACULATE. The only place pros are willing to look bad (to their credit) is the rough.
As a crappy, but still competitive mid-am, I understand some of their thinking, of course. Lots of people are unwilling to have a tournament turn on who got the best breaks in crappy bunkers all week, so I understand most pros' aversion to crappy bunker conditions, but I do have a hard time understanding their unwillingness to play slow greens one week and then fast the next. Seems to me that that type of variation would help identify the best all-around putters on tour, not just the best "fast green" putters on tour....
But that's just me. :-)