There are hundreds of otherwise excellent golf courses that time has passed by and memberships are struggling, or green fees are low because they are considered "Holiday" courses-especially in the UK.
Jeff
Are you suggesting that clubs are struggling because they are now too short for the ball/technology and that suddenly they will be OK if either they are lengthened to "championship" length a la Merion, or alternatively if the ball is rolled back they will suddenly have a queue of new would-be members ?
Either way, I think the suggestion is beyond credible in a UK context. There are many reasons why clubs are struggling just now that are largely down to socio-economic factors, not because courses have become functionally obsolete (which by and large they haven't).
As an aside the term holiday course isn't a derisive description to a lot of golfers over here. It might be to the odd visitor golfer or scratch golfer who is after "championship" golf but the great many fully enjoy there holiday golf.
Niall
Niall,
Of course there are too many golf courses and that is the root cause of why many courses struggle.
You and I know they are not "funtionally obsolete" for anyone but that doesn't matter to the hot shit young exec from Aberdeen or New York who wants credibility. (He ain't joining a "Holiday" course when his buds are all members at an Open Q site or a modern monstrocity.)
That said, I have seen the term "Holiday" course used very often(even here) almost as an apology and interestingly that attracts me and nearly always it's course I love,but they are most decidedly not considered as Open qualifiers etc. which is an oft used marketing strategy by clubs-hurting sales to rank and files golfers.
And they certainly aren't heavily patronized by the travelling golfer-yet nearly always have compelling architecture albeit on a reduced scale which is totally neutered or at least marginalized(regardless of what they shoot) by good players.
Building new tees(not at all what I suggest as that's a sure recipe for further financial problems) or reducing the ball wouldn't "instantly" do anything, but over time, some of these gems WOULD indeed be used for competitions and taken more seriously by younger decent players looking for a home base.
These courses weren't designed in 1877 to be "Holiday" courses. They just became that as technology improved and new shiny toy courses emerged over the last 100 plus years.
I'd go farther out on a limb and say that we wouldn't have had so much shite designed vapid modern courses if the ball had remained static from say 1900 and we'd be playing in less time on more sustainable 5000 yard courses where strategy not raw distance mattered.
The fact that I can book such courses a week in advance on a Saturday morning is resounding evidence that the rest of the world (including the UK) does not share the view you and I do, yet nearby Castle Stuart or any other "championship" course an American has heard of is 2-5 X the price and unavailable on a weekend morning.
Even Tom Doak dismissed many of these charming shorter well pedigreed courses due to their length in his 1980's version of the CG(which he was afraid they(his intended audience of friends) would dismiss as low hdcpers)
Would a rollback immediately change this?
No, but people would sure wonder why they were playing a 7000 yard crappy parkland when they could have so much more fun on an interesting design that was no longer as obsoleted by tech.(and more importantly being recognized as viable again by local Golf associations)
You think Merion's demand for guest play has risen since 2013?
And for the record IMHO that's not always a good thing to an already successful club.
Imagine all the course in the US that would be considered for majors again if the ball went 15-20% less.
and the world could see a new course considered for majors wouldn't have to be beast walk like Erin Hills, Chambers Bay,etc.(or The Bridge in its original form)
In the UK the rota is set, but certainly other top events could be played on a wider range of courses.
Gailles Links, which you're familiar with, has back tees in the stratosphere, which is the ONLY reason they use it for Final Open Qualifying(no chance without them) so yes other courses could do that-or we could reduce the ball and instantly have hundreds if not thousands of courses available for competition and continued member enjoyment of faster rounds.
Does my argument have holes in it?
Of course.
But what we've doing the last 20 years has far more holes and there is NO end in sight. and it's been Trumpized (normalized).
And recently the rank and file even talk about "something needing to be done"
Cuz guess what-next year's Epic goes 2.6 yards further and new tees are still getting built and more "irons only" driving ranges are being created