Watching a few of Arnie's comments last week, I think possibly the older players and those that have memories of golf pre-70s, might have some inkling of what is coming and what needs to be done by players as their responsibility to promote and work hard for the tour's health. But, I tend to think that the active younger players have no clue, and no motivation (yet) to really dig in and work very hard on their own individual efforts and assumed responsibility to promote all that they can manage to attempt to maintain their sports relavance in comparison to the public's perceptions of the merits of the sport of golf and need for diversion of a stunned and economically depressed population.
I think that the current perception of those that follow golf may be that "Tour Golf" is purse oriented. But a significant number of people only get charged up when the sport is 'competitive' oriented, with the example of the competition of the Ryder cup (non-purse in theory) capturing the most enthusiasm. If the tour can't keep the competition interest higher, with interesting venues and formats, I think they are in for a real and prolonged slide.
Dick:
What I've been wondering during the post-golf-season economic fallout is whether the nature of the Tour might change. Right now it's kind of a three-tier Tour:
A) The majors and anything else Tiger plays in;
B) Big tourneys like the Memorial, the old Crosby clam-bake, the LA/Nissan Open, and some others that may not draw Tiger, but get Mickelson, Singh, Els, and assorted other top-50 players, and have some stature and favorable locations on the schedule;
C) Places like Milwaukee which get the leftovers, and are hurt by scheduling.
I think the all-exempt Tour, and the rise of the Nationwide Tour, has actually exacerbated this situation. Lots of guys, I'm convinced, don't "work hard" at promoting the Tour ala the 1960s and 70s, as you referenced, because they are primarily concerned with keeping their card, and these days that takes just a few high finishes. And there are lots of golfers jumping back and forth between 2nd-and 3rd tier tour events, and the Nationwide Tour, and making a pretty decent living -- enough to stave off the teaching pro/college coach line of work.
I wonder if going back to a system that, say, cuts off card renewal at the top 60, or 75, might inject some needed energy into the Tour. It needs it.