Playing old courses with old equipment is enlightening. I've played with hickory and wound balls on a Ross course where I was a member.
For me, it wasn't a choice to play the ground game, it was the only option.
Our 1925 course was lengthened in the 1950s. Until reading Paul Runyan’s book for Older Golfers (which despite the title is a fascinating instructional guide - pinch cut anyone?) where he lays out the typical driving distances of different classes of golfers, that it clicked that many of the course features only make sense when scaled to the equipment and capabilities of the 1950s.
Example: 7/16 play 390/420. 30 yards in front of the green there’s a 1 foot mound covered in fescue bisecting the fairway. Today, that mound is a non issue for better men (though it torments many women and seniors). Back in the 1950s that would be what a driver/4-iron then a driver/3 or 5 wood? Coming in with those clubs that feature makes sense.
This has helped me clarify my thinking about equipment and architecture in a simple formula: experience = equipment x layout.
The dependent variable in this formulation is experience. I think of that as similar to the idea of “the questions the course asks”. With the clubs of the day our course’s questions are tough: long irons and woods into par 3s, barely reachable par 5s, creeks in landing zones on a 3 and threatening 2nd shots on a par 5, tiny greens (sub 3000 sq ft) welcoming mid irons and longer.
Overall, the experience of playing our course was more demanding - and the players of that time appeared to want it and enjoy it!
Now, equipment is different. The course is mostly the way it was. And for most good players the course is kind of short (6000 yards) and many hazards are irrelevant.
Experience has suffered. Yes scores should be lower, but with todays equipment players are like Godzilla stomping around Tokyo: satisfying in some sense but ultimately silly.
I blame the equipment manufacturers and the governing bodies. They’ve played to the nearly universal desire to play better to change the scale of the game, and the governing bodies let them.
Now that the scale is off due to the equipment, the experience is what has suffered. It’s still a fine and interesting course (for what it is)but the experience, the demand to well play long irons and woods into the long 3s (170, 175, 185, 210), the rationally placed hazards, the tiny approach targets, is a shell of the challenge our forebearers chose to embrace.