Lou,
Ian Andrew and I have both argued boundary issues are exacerbated by the ball going further off-line. I've never seen the ball hit as far off line as it is now by exactly the players Duncan is referencing - young, strong guys with speed, the club way inside and the face open. The consequent high, block cuts go miles off line.
Mike,
Let me note at the outset that I look forward to seeing your work at Shady Oaks. I used to play the course a bit some years ago and felt that it could be substantially improved.
Re: distance related boundary/safety problems, I did qualify my comments as being U.S. centric. I would enjoy reading your and Ian's arguments if you are able to link them for me.
From personal experience, I can remember just one wildly hit drive that went a mile some 100 yards offline- a Mike Nuzzo straight pull at Whispering Pines more than 15 years ago. It was so unique that I still remember the shot (though not the specific hole) like it was yesterday and that he was able to then hit it over the trees to the green in regulation.
I can think of specific, individual examples of long hitters at various handicap levels and without exception, the wild misses, especially to the right/slice side are considerably shorter. Having followed the distance issue for as long as I've been on this site (some 20 years), I play close attention to how others play the game every time I am on the course.
Without a dog in this hunt, I am fairly comfortable that confirmation bias has not seeped into my still open opinion on this issue. Again, from my experience relative to safety, I have more to fear from close-in than from 300+ yards out. I've been hit twice in my 50+ years in the game, once from < 5 yards, the other from about 40 or so, both shanks hit by very poor golfers. Perhaps I should become an activist in pushing the ruling bodies to require proper training, licensing and periodic re-testing of golfers in order to allowed on the course. Talk about "common sense regulation" killing the victim.
It seems to me that just throwing stuff up on the wall to see what might stick is counterproductive. Having followed the issue for a long time, I've evolved from an uncompromising roll-back to at least the Titleist Professional era position to a mostly leave-it-alone for the 99% of us for whom how far we hit the ball is not a problem. The game can withstand bifurcation for high level competitions, maybe even gross club championships. After all, from the courses to the equipment, what nearly all of us play on a regular basis has little resemblance to what these exceptional golfers experience.
As an example, I played Blessings Golf Club recently from a bit over 6600 yards. One of the guys in my group was playing new Homa irons with a price of $400/club (he said that they were mid-priced in that brand), optimized for his swing. Both he and his equally well-equipped friend hit the ball 50+ yards pass me off the tee and usually would hit two less clubs on the iron shots from the same distance. At 6600 yards, Blessings was more than we could handle (all of us were in the 2-6 index range) and we were up 1300 yards from the back markers. The club is hosting the inaugural SEC Invitational tournament today through Wednesday (on the Golf Channel) and it will be interesting to watch what the men will shoot from around 7400 yards. It is just a very different game for which, if a solvable "problem" does exist, merits a different, more nuanced approach than the one-size-fits-all roll-back.