As Tom Paul was fond of saying, golf is almost unique among games/sports in that the opponents are not vying for the (same) ball. In golf it doesn't matter if everyone else is built like a linebacker and can hit the ball a mile, as long as you can work your *own* golf ball around in fewer strokes. Who ever worked the ball better than 5 foot 9 inch Ben Hogan, on wrecked legs and a 3 pack a day habit? If he was playing today with modern equipment fully optimized, does anyone really believe he wouldn't meaningfully compete against these (apparently) remarkable athletes who have been training (wrongly in my opinion) since they were 5 years old? In my view this modern training approach is a *belief system*, no more, no less -- based a bit perhaps on science, so called, but even more to do with willing and hoping and guessing and posturing and with fulfilling other needs (conscious and unconscious) that are mostly independent of the game's demands (e.g. six pack abs sell more energy drinks than a beer gut, especially if you're wearing a golf shirt that's two sizes too small). As a belief system, it's probably more like astrology than it is even, say, capitalism. The way most of these young golfers are behaving, it's as if they really believe that astrology and horoscopes and the trickle down theory are "true"....
Peter