Today must have been one bad day on both coasts. These threads on technology and the ones on Torrey Pines got me scratching my head. Did something get into the water out there?
Mr. Fortson,
Get some sleep, take some Prozac, and re-read your posts. Maybe you need another chance to make modifications.
You say: " Let the few that play the game to "hit it long" quit, and draw back the thousands that have quit and continue to quit because golf has become too expensive and one-dimensional."
I can buy the expense issue, but this is the first time I've ever heard that people quit because golf is too one-dimensional. Quite the opposite, surveys show that many people don't stay with the game because it is too difficult. When is the last time one of your students said to you "to hell with golf, it is just too simple and it just doesn't offer enough variety and interest".
You say: "I feel there is a direct link between the advancement of technology in golf equipment (especially the ball) and the rise in cost and increase in time it takes to play a round of golf."
I think that this is a demonstrably incorrect "feeling". I know that from the time I started playing golf, in the late 60s, after adjusting for inflation, clubs are not more expensive. That product cycles are shorter and people switch clubs more often is an issue of choice not expense, and it has the salutory effect of a strong used-club market with some unbelievable values (e.g. a Titleist 975D driver with a premium shaft for under $50). And even at $40/dozen, the ProVs are a better deal than the mush balatas I played with in the 70s which cost $18+ and if you looked at them strangely you put a smile on them. Today you can buy an 18 ball pack of high performance Spalding balls for $12, or a double-dozen Nike pack at Sams for under $20.
You assert: " .... the overall drop in quality of golf courses that have been designed in the last 15 years. One could even argue the last 50 years."
I couldn't disagree with you more. I see between 25 - 50 new courses (built in the last 15 years) annually and I am happy to report that there are many, many wonderful golf courses that've been built during this time. In fact, I would argue that we are in the midst of a golf architecture renaissance. I only wish I could be around in 50 years when people will look back fondly to the period beginning in the mid to late 80s and acknowledge a second, longer lasting classical age.
You say: "Helping you or others hit better shots through your purchasing power is not making this sport better, it's slowly killing it. Golf means more to me than big drives and spinning iron shots."
Again, another unfounded, unsupported assertion, possibly sprinklered with a little class envy. And for someone who hits a driver-9 iron to Pasatiempo's #10, your last sentence is quite self-serving. By the way, weren't you playing a ProV1? Amazing how your ProV1 is so much longer than mine (I hit driver, 3 metal-wood short, if you recall).
The sad thing about the new techonology is that it helps the strong, highly skilled player like you disproportionally. The less athletic, weaker player gets a little help getting the ball up in the air faster, and maybe out of the rough, but not much more. If the average consumer has not figured this out and continues to "invest" in clubs instead of lessons, well that's his problem (it may also say something about the quality of golf instruction).
You say: "For a TRUE golfer the lure of the game is the acquisition of skill, not technology. Anyone looking for the easy road to better scores is worth maginalizing to me. If you or someone else quit because the USGA made a rule where the balata became as advanced as a ball could get, then I could live with that."
Do you realize just how arrogant this statement is? You are now into what is and what isn't golf, and giving yourself license to lambast those who may disagree with you (probably about 99% of all golfers; but these are not "TRUE" golfers in your world). And BTW, the USGA does not have the authority to make me play with a balata or the power to make me quit the game. With your attitude, perhaps you should be forced to play with a featherie and in plus-fours.
Finally, you conclude with: "I truly feel that those that would leave the sport because of a technological roll-back don't have their heart in the right place anyway, IMHO. The selfish, egocentric desire to drive the ball long and straight through technological advancement is the search for golf's equivalent of the Fountain of Youth, it is a false reality.
So everyone, don't live in denial, all those drives that you hit with a 450cc head driver with a Pro V1 are the doing of your equipment, not your skill. If you can live with that, then you play this game for the wrong reasons."
Jeff, golf is an individual sport played by many different people with a variety of objectives. Why are you so harsh in your rhetoric? Do you think that perhaps your positions can be described as embedded in selfishness and egocentrism?
If you really want to understand the reasons why golf is expensive look at the ever-increasing costs for land, regulatory compliance, permitting, construction, taxes, and risk management. Also, you may wish to examine the demand side as well. There are many consumers who are willing and able to pay $$$$ to play. There are some 18,000 courses out there, and today more than ever, people have more choice and greater access. Perhaps not to a Pebble Beach or NGLA, but there are many, many good affordable courses out there. And for most of us, these are courses which challenge, interest, and bring us back time and time again.
Jeff, you got to get out of the NYC area and get another perspective. As Dr. Childs warned me, there are just way too many Democrats up there. Good luck!