Ben H. -
Thanks for the data. I was offering an observation, not passing judgement.
Today the tee on #6 was moved back one tee box and the pin is way back right on the green. The run-off areas behind and back right of the green were very much in play today.
I saw the 3-some of Olson, Jutanugarn and Lucy Li play the hole this morning. All 3 of them missed the fairway and missed the green. All 3 of them made 5.
I will be interested to see today's stroke average for the hole.
DT
Beth Ann Nichols wrote a great article back in March for GolfWeek about this subject.
Let them score: How misguided course setups are holding back women’s golf
I often looked at how the disparity in distance has impacted the PGA tour when comparing different eras, trying to understand how much shorter the modern course plays vs. what was played 20, 30, or 40 years ago, but never applied the same logic to men vs. women. Even though it's pretty obvious when watching the LPGA vs PGA I failed to connect the dots until reading Beth's article.
It does make a lot of sense, if your goal was to provide the same level of entertainment within your event, the course needs to be set up to equalize the approach shots. I believe the USGA did a great job with that this week.
I understand the logic, but believe it is flawed.
They're professionals. The problem isn't that 3-shot holes are 3-shot holes for most of the women's field... it's that men's professional golf has been ruined by technology.
The majority of men on Tour should not be getting home in 2-shots on par-5's. And certainly not with mid-irons. That's silly. Old Tom Morris would vomit all the way down the fairway seeing Men's professional golf today.
About 35-years ago, the USGA and R&A instituted a "One-Ball Rule"... now obsolete due to the urethane ball replacing the wound ball. That rule was implemented in the early 80's because the pro's were switching to hard 2-piece balls (Pinnacles, Top-Flites, etc) in order to reach, or get around the greens of 5-s in two... with fairway woods.
Remember the day when Curtis Strange was charging back at the Masters after an opening round of 80? He was hitting fairway woods into 13 (and failing to reach the green). Chip Beck... in contention but in need of birdies... laid-up because he didn't think he could get home with a fairway wood after a good drive. Oh...the misery of making gut wrenching choices and having to hit career best shots under pressure with long sticks!
If I were king for a day, I would roll back the ball to 1981 distances, I'd reduce the number of clubs to 9, irons wouldn't have grooves (so the rough could be light and still be difficult to control the ball)*, and the maximum wood head size would be about 275cc. Then you would be able to tell who the ball-strikers are... and you'd find a new generation of Trevino's or Pavin's.
*If you hit it in the fairway, you'll be able to generate ample spin.
In Europe though, for the general membership, the length of most women's courses are far too long. I did a study of a region 25-years ago, and the women were playing courses that were US Open length. With the average age of women golfers being about 50, and a the average 21-year old female having the strength of a 65-year old man... these courses couldn't be much fun.
As an aside. The LPGA long driver in that article you linked to averaged 6-yards less than the 1981 PGA Tour long driver Dan Pohl. I believe he hit it 274.1 that year. In that era, a 440-yard par-4 was a challenging hole; a drive and a medium-long to long-iron. Calvin Peete likely hit 4-wood into the green. Today... it's a drive and wedge or 9-iron. That to me shows the women's game is about right with their course setups.
The problem really isn't how the courses are set up for the women. They're professionals, playing the professional game. The problem is men's professional golf is a broken... ruined... kaput.