I'm opposed to bifurcation, and don't really care what 0.001% of the world's golfers do. And, it's not like they're shooting 65s every week. The leading -
leading - scoring average in 2017 was a whopping… 68.85. 17 years before that… it was 67.8.
Golf can't be compared to other sports. Golf essentially has one set of rules. MLB, the NFL, etc. govern only their leagues.
And stop blaming only the USGA. The R&A have an equal role in this. Blame 'em both equally if you want to blame 'em at all.
Fact of the matter is that you could give Dustin Johnson a 1997 Pinnacle and he'd still hit the ball as far as he does now. Today's players swing longer, lighter, larger drivers. They understand launch conditions. They know the benefits of distance. They swing faster and are more athletic.
And they're the very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very small minority.
99.9%+ of golfers are challenged playing just about any golf course out there. And The U.S. Open was thrilling at Pinehurst #2 in 2014, and that course was pretty old. Oakmont stands up to the test. Pebble Beach. Bethpage. These aren't 20-year-old courses.
I just don't see the point. There's so much to lose in bifurcating.
P.S. Don't tell me wedge grooves are bifurcated. Ams haven't been able to buy a non-conforming wedge for like seven years now, and virtually all wedges used by any serious players are using the same conforming grooves as PGA Tour players have to use. If you're using a pre-2010 wedge… the grooves aren't giving you an advantage anyway because they're really old.