Quite frankly I am completely in the dark about some of the claims of 300 yard drives from putative eight handicaps. I know Nicklaus states that with the new equipment and ball he is as long now as he was thirty years ago.
As a fifty year old I could hit the 16th at CPC and the 4th at MPCC Dunes, about 238 yards, with a three of four wood. As a septagenerian I find it difficult to get close with a driver. Titanium drivers exploding Pro V1's, you name it, I seem to be the exception to the rule.
Bob,
The reason you haven't seen it is because it isn't happening. Driving distances are like fish stories.
Go to a flat par four on a relatively windless day, with relatively "normal" firmness in the fairway and wait 300 yds. out from the tee to be struck by a golf ball flying a fairway bunker off the clubface of an 8 handicapper. You'll be there all day.
For the average golfer between a 5 and a 15, a drive that they just kill will go about 265 yds. under the above conditions.
On Monday, I watched the best HS golfers in Georgia at the state AAAAA championship tournament. (By the way, my team, Roswell HS, finished third at 597
on what will probably be my last day as a HS coach after 31 years) I watched approx. 100 players, many of whom will be playing college golf next year or the year after, come in on #9 and #18, which are parallel with #10 in between. It was a dry, windless day in the mid-80's. I saw maybe 10 balls all day exceed 300 yds. off the tee. The better players averaged about 275.
When players of my level (I'm a 53 yr. old 7 handicap) tell me about 300 yd. drives they have struck or seen struck, I KNOW one of several things has happened.
1. Unusual conditions in terms of wind, drought, etc.
2. Lots of downhill assistance.
3. A scorecard that has "fudged" distances.
4. Tees that were well up from the printed distance.
5. Piss-poor math skills.
6. Literary license.
7. A combination of 1-6.
As to the gap, Craig Sweet is dead on. The gap isn't growing as much as is purported, though clearly a constant % of a growing number results in a growing gap. I guesstimate that the gap between the pros and the "average" 8 handicap off the tee is about 30 yds., and the irons probably run about 15-20 yds. If you take a 420 yd. par four, the pro hits it 285 off the tee, I hit it 255 off the tee. I have 165 left, and hit a 5 iron (maybe a six) while the pro hits a 7, maybe an 8. Check out Shotlink if you think they are hitting 9 irons 165! It ain't happening...