I'm with you Jeff, but I do not see the silver lining. If the course dries up and green speeds DO reach 13+, the viewing public, specifically all the "sticks" at most clubs, will simply cry for faster greens ALL THE TIME at their home course.
Agreed somewhat.
By silver lining, I meant hopefully people would see greens could run at reasonable speeds and provide interesting golf, and the course not yield crazy low scores.
Of course it could be argued that stupid high rough is holding scores in check, and I would agree that drives up the AVERAGE score, but the fact that no one is taking it really deep (including those in every fairway unaffected by rough) tells me green tilt, not speed is a great defense against low scores,all while providing compelling, interesting, fun golf.
My dream would be everything drying out and firming up and the green speeds remaining reasonable (but that probably won't happen and you will probably be right)
My real dream is that the USGA would stop quoting stupid,unrealistic stimpmeter targets.
In the last 3 years I've heard/read from USGA officials 15, 14.5, 14 and this year 13.5 as "targets"
What positive affects could that possibly have on sustainability , fun, and architecture in golf?, to say nothing of its effect on "While we're young"
They haven't sniffed those numbers, and if you really needed to hit those targets to test the best players, you need to pick different venues.(and the venues aren't the problem)