A few days ago, I played golf in a group of friends who are solid and well-traveled players with a very casual wager. On a course in perfect condition, I watched as they picked up their ball in fairways and wiped morning dew off of it before placing it where they preferred, lifted it up in the rough to identify it and then moved it into a better position, gave themselves extremely generous drops from lateral hazards, and requested mulligans on multiple occasions (which others in the group were eager to grant).
I've also, in the last few days, seen a blog post asking readers what rule they most regularly ignore, and also seen someone post on a golf forum that the course he played a few days ago had untended bunkers and he would recommend taking a "free drop" to anyone in one, as they'd most likely otherwise find themselves in a footprint.
I don't point any of this out to pass judgment on anyone who doesn't play by all the rules all the time, but I did have a thought as I was watching a guy in the aforementioned group fluff his lie for the 74th time in the round...
The course we were playing was a uniquely awful residential course. It was built by Nicklaus Design, and flaunts as much despite the fact that Jack never set foot on the property during construction. There are multiple cart rides between holes of 1/4 mile or so, and multiple holes with OB lining both sides of the fairway with housing not far beyond. The greens are unusually narrow and the rough is extremely thick. Simply put, it's a cart-required "championship" course that's almost a guaranteed five-hour round if you don't get out in one of the first groups. It's the kind of design that bludgeons most recreational players - you know, the people who actually play most courses...
Except it doesn't really bludgeon them, because most of them don't play by the rules. They roll the ball into preferred lies and give themselves putts inside 5 feet. They walk into adjacent lawns to retrieve balls that are OB and put them back in bounds without penalty (or just play from the neighboring lawn in more egregious cases). They take free drops if they hit the ball into an iffy lie IN A HAZARD(!!!). They take mulligans and stop counting after reaching a certain number on a hole.
How does the culture of cheating in golf influence architecture? Would a more "by the rulebook" culture be a boon to courses that offer playability and a minimum of situations where rule interpretations are required? Would residential cartball torture tests exist if recreational players actually played by the rules, or would they be so difficult that they'd be economically unviable? Are crappy, one-dimensional, highly penal courses enabled by the fact that most players ignore the rules that otherwise would make them unplayable?