Shivas.
I find it interesting that you begin every post to me by telling me what I mean/meant, as opposed to accepting what I told you I mean/meant. One more time . . . My first statement to Matt was an absurd exaggeration for emphasis, posted as an offset to (IMO) Matt's absurd position regarding unfairness to better players. Even if you didnt take it this way in my initial post, I have repeatedly explained my position. I have an idea . . . why dont you address my real position? Let me break it down for you.
1. The better player
always has the advantage, no matter how quirky the course.
2. No golfer ever gets the exact result they deserve, there are just too many random variables in golf. These variables are what makes golf interesting from round to round, day to day, year to year. They are what gives golf its character, its sense of excitement and adventure, what seperates the range from the course, what keeps golfers golfing and out of long drive competitions and bowling alleys. They are sometimes what seperates great gca from good gca.
I never said I wanted to reward skill less. I did say that golf needs more random elements not less.
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. . .
Let's get to the heart of this: why do you NOT want to reward skill in golf more?
What do you mean "reward skill more?" Skill is rewarded in golf. But Matt wants to create a situation where his "better players" receive a much larger reward then they already receive. He is entitled to his opinion, but is mistaken in pretending that this is a question of fairness.
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Your zero sum analysis is absurd. Since when is golf the equivalent of a no-carries-skins-game? Moreover, since when is one golfer lucky and another unlucky over the long haul? Do you have any scientific support for your
Some Golfers Get All the Luck! hypothetical? Perhaps the reason you have such an aversion to accepting random elements is that you think your opponents are too often "lucky," like the golfer in Dan's quote?
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Shivas, regarding Seve, you've completely missed it again. Most definitely Seve's recovery shots are very skillful. But his shot prior to the revovery was most likely miserable, or Seve wouldnt need to recover. In Matt's world where poor shots should be consistently punished, Seve doesnt
deserve a chance at birdie. Instead he deserves to be punished for hitting his prior shot 40 yds off line, or in a tree, or where ever.
As I said above . . . "
If a course consistently doled out the punishment Seve or you deserved on the former shot, you would be forced to take your medicine, instead of giving you or Seve a chance at a miracle."
Think if it this way . . . replace Seve's oft challenging circumstances with circumstances which are truly penal, like his ball in a lake or O.B. Not even Seve can hit it on the green from the bottom of a lake.
So yes, Seve is lucky-- lucky that designers of the great courses didnt listen to you and Matt. Lucky that they didnt believe in minimizing randomness and 'rub of the green.'
Matt would never give a poor driver like Seve a chance to salvage the hole. He'd call it unfair if after Seve's poor drives, he had any chance at par or birdie at all.