Delurking:
Tell ya what boys....this weekend I was lucky enough to be put on the Titleist swing computer that measures ball speed, spin rate and launch angle. Without any change in equipment they were able to keep my ball speed and spin rate the same and adjust my launch angle through a combinination of teaching and weight shift to where I gained 20 yds off of the tee. Now I got redanesque length to go with my rodanesque physique...it is a very good place to be.
Repeating myself from another thread:
Talking this week with a teaching pro that works with several tour players - he related the fact that club fitting has become more than just a simple technical science. The combination of shaft, head, swingweight, etc. and sophisticated swing analysis and the subsequent swing adjustments thereby gaining the optimum launch angle in combination with the new balls (esp Titleist) is providing tremendous gains in distance. One of his "students" has gained nearly 30 yards the last two years. Each manufacturer understands exactly what the combination is for the player to maximize the potential of their products and work very hard for their players to gain that advantage.
I played a round at a course that I designed, today - a practice round with a couple of club pro friends that will play in a qualifier for the state open there next week. The course opened in 1995, I think.
Two years ago the fairway bunkers were in play - a
very well struck shot could carry them and on some holes they pinched the fairway requiring a long tee shot to be accurate. No more. The bunkers, in many cases were no longer an obstacle. My one friend made the comment that it looks like this course is obsolete. We figured that the course played 2 to 3 clubs shorter than it did two years ago. And, everybody was playing the Pro V* not the x nor the new Callaway Tour Hex, both of which are supposed to be longer.
Sure, it isn't obsolete for the recreational golfer, but the course has held events for club pros and amateurs over the years, which is good PR and it would be a shame if it couldn't continue to do so - but I suppose that there are many, many courses in the same boat.
8,000 (insert your own expletive here, if you care to) yards here we come.
PS - followed an excellent amateur for a couple of hole at Purgatory GC the other day, he plays out west in college - on #8, a 485 yard par four, slightly downhill, but against a decent breeze -> driver / PW, no problem...like John Hiatt says, "what do we do now, what do we do now, what do we do now." Build more tees, I guess.