The idea that there are "tournament courses" is one of the reasons why I never became a fan of professional golf. I love the design, optionality, and strategy of golf courses, and I want to make that accessible to
everyone. When I go play a "tournament course" like Bethpage Black all I see are tests of strength, and that's fine i guess, but the hit-it-long-and-straight game doesn't appeal to me as much as the angles, tradeoffs, and a healthy dose of luck that comes from the courses I like to play. I want to watch golf where you have golf's version of John Madden drawing a bunch of arrows on a map to explain how players might choose to play the hole.
I'm glued to my television when the Open is at St Andrews, mostly because I know every inch of the course and all the strategy, but it's kind of silly when the benefit of carrying the Principal's Nose is the difference between an 8 iron and a gap wedge, before even mentioning the central point of the hole isn't even in play when Cam Smith "
lays up" to it with an iron and the "strategy" that Young uses makes Grant's bunker more of a concern than anything else:
The professional game just isn't the same the one we play. To make it the same game, we don't just need longer holes, because the approach shots are longer too. To make the game even comparable i feel like we would need to build olympic swimming pool sized fairway bunkers with 15ft lips, just to make them materially significant... If the professional organizations built that well, I feel like they could get a bit of the spirit back, but you're never going to create the nostalgia and tradition that a course needs to be a great tournament course, because nobody would yearn to play there and not even break 100.
We are dealing with the fallout of a juiced-ball or steroid-like era that never ended... and I feel like an old man complaining about it, but it was exciting to see Bubba Watson cut the corner (a novel strategy executed well), but then when Bryson drives the green over a damn lake, we've honestly jumped the shark. I don't think there is a feasible way to build new courses every 10 years to put the genie back in the bottle.