I will occasionally see comments from Patrick Mucci, TEPaul and others concerning the possible negative effect of the L wedge on architecture. I'm skeptical of this, I'd like to hear what everyone thinks. Whether we're talking pros, amateurs, or hacks.
My belief is that since a PW was 51 or 52 degrees in Hogan's day, and a SW was 55 or 56 degrees, there's not much difference between an old SW and today's 60 degree LW. You have the older SW and want a higher shot, you open the clubface, just like one might do today for a really high shot using an LW. I don't think there's anything anyone halfway decent at the game can do with a LW they couldn't do with a low bounce 56 degree SW.
Anyone know the origins of the LW? When was it created, by who, for what reason? Who popularized it? Without knowing anything about it, my hunch would be that as irons started getting stronger lofts thanks to Ping and later other manufacturers, the PW got stronger and thus the SW got stronger to not leave too much of a gap. Some players who played where lob shots were useful might have decided to buy an older high loft SW with less bounce than most from the used clubs bin, and found adding a few extra degrees of loft gave it a comfortable spread from their new stronger SW, and the LW was born.
So tying this back into architecture, I don't think there's any reason it couldn't have been invented back in the days of Snead and Hogan, but until irrigation made bare lies rarer, and collars of rough started surrounding greens, and later containment mounding around greens became popular, there wasn't a good need or role for the LW. At least not often enough to justify carrying it. Just like a 2W/brassie used to be a useful club for playing the maintenance meld of the 30s, but has so little utility in today's game it isn't worth carrying it as one of your 14 clubs. I don't think the LW minimizes the effect of golden age architecture. If anything it is enhanced since a good player has more options in certain situations. Yes, it can be overused by people who play almost all their shots around the green using an LW, but IMHO that's a result of either the player or the architect (or both) lacking imagination.