I like flat greens.
Not 18 in a row, all tilted back to front, mind you; but I like them more than as just an occasional relief from the more undulating greens, especially if one tilts front to back, and the next left to right, and the next back to front, and so on.
The earlier thread about shrinking pin positions and increased green speeds brought this to mind. In current gca thinking, is there something inherently wrong with having a majority of flat greens on any given 18?
To me, they seem somehow more fair, especially for a public course player. I like putting on them, whether they're running fast or slow. I think I can (occasionally) read them pretty well. And, while they're not as fun in a roller-coaster sort of way as big, undulating greens, even the flattest-seeming green has subtle breaks, and it's fun to be able to make a putt every once in a while.
Can flat greens ever make a comeback, in the sense that they'll be regarded every bit as valid and good as undulating greens? (Are they currently so regarded?) With increased green speeds, will form follow function and make them a very popular choice? Is the alternative (i.e. undulating but shrinking greens) as much an aesthetic choice as anything else?
Also, flat greens seem to me more natural somehow (but maybe it's just that I've got a picture in my head of some big, flat British Isles' greens). But when I think of Augusta National, for example, I think of a course that was always intended for 'private' use. Is this one of the reasons for the design of the undulating greens there (and their popularity at other private courses), i.e. that at a course designed for play by the same members, every day, it's necessary to make the greens a continual source of discovery/challenge?
Thanks
Peter