Pete,
I tend to disagree that todays greens require a stroke rather than a hit. I have stated before, and perhaps wrongly, that todays greens speeds have diminished the requirements of the putting stroke. Back in the day, when greens rolled 5 or 6 on the stimpmeter, the best putters were the ones who had the solid stroke that hit the sweet spot consistently. The others would blast away, sometimes going way past, but often ending up way short.
Today, we line up and give the ball a tap. Of course, I also believe the best putters always get the best results, but I think the disparity between good putters and not so good putters is diminshed on todays fast and smooth surfaces.
Reserving the right to be completely wrong,
Joe
I can't agree with that. On today's greens, a solid, 7 to 5 stroke that applies overspin is still as necessary to really make putts. A non-solid stroke is always less likely to be holed than a solid one. It used to run away with grain and slope, now it runs away from the cup with lesser slope and greater speed. I think the skill required is equal, but different.
Now, I do suspect that the smoother greens create fewer misses because of bumpiness, and Tour stats bear that out. I think there is about one stroke improvement in average scores over the last decade or so, almost all of it related to putting. Of course, those guys are the best and very best putters, and all have pretty solid strokes.
If greens really did "hinder" the game, would it show up in Tour stats and numbers of victories? In theory, wouldn't the best putters win far more often than the top players/putters of yesteryear? Or would they win less if greens allowed others to equalize their games? In that case, the Brad Faxons and other good putters would be on top of the tour, no? It seems to still take a complete game, and I see no stats correlation on Tour that would say modern greens either help or hurt anyone.
Lastly, better greens have been the mantra of golf since at least the 1930's when the Green Section was formed. I am not sure that it has sprung up overnight, or that we have made progress recently. Its been a slow evolutions, and golfers have adapted. None of that ruins the game, and most would argue it is a constant refinement and improvement.