As some have attempted to allude to above and elsewhere, there’s a much bigger picture than scoring and whether players in the bar want easier to hit clubs, distance etc. Folks play golf for many reasons other than score, ease of play and distance and will continue to do so.
A golf course though, takes up a big footprint on the ground. The further the ball goes, irrespective of why, the greater the footprint needed (and the greater the surrounding safety zone).
There are now approx 7.5 billion people in the world. All 7.5 billion, and their increasing by the day offspring, want somewhere to live, water to drink, clean, cook and land and water to grow and irrigate crops.
Do golfers seriously think the 7.5 billion and their increasing by the day offspring give a damn about golf?
When push comes to shove the offspring of the current 7.5 billion will if necessary pull down the fences, invade and squat on our precious golf courses, tap into the irrigation systems and grow crops on the greens and fairways.
Okay, I’m being deliberately provocative here to make a point but ultimately the game of golf is not as important as the game of life.
I’ve reposted Mike Cirbas excellent sentence before but here it is again -
“A game dependent on so much of the earth’s acreage on a shrinking planet with finite resources is inevitably going to be on the wrong side of history and a game where the balls and implements aren’t effectively controlled within certain parameters befitting the challenge is similarly going to become antiquated, much as that may seem counter-intuitive.”
Atb