Sully:
Come on, you of all people should know what I'm talking about. If a golf course's green surface firmness is set up with what I call a really Ideal Maintenance Meld for very good players it will produce both percieved and also very real problems for others.
There is no reason at all to alter the firmness of "through the green" LZs and approaches for anyone but the degree of green surface firmness for various levels of golfers is an entirely different world and immensely complex and potentially problematic in the world of green surface firmness. And it's also the primary reason I do make such a distinction between green surface firmness and other areas.
You give the grandmas of the world and their fellow traveler type golfers green surface firmness of the type and degree that's ideal to challenge a golfer like you and basically they don't have a chance in hell of holding a green with an aerial shot onto it with one of their full shots or a green that doesn't have a ground game approach option or a realistic one.
You don't think that creates immense problems amongst memberships? There's no question about it. This just falls right into the lap of the entire "easier/harder" dynamic that almost always exists at clubs amongst the levels of golfers at either end of the ability spectrum and causes immense problems to getting things like this F&F philosophy done.
It would be great if all clubs were able to develop a mentality amongst entire memberships the way HVGC has and the way Oakmont and Merion East has but the truth and realitiy is that took some pretty interesting and special sets of circumstances at those clubs, and still today clubs and courses like that are pretty rare.
But don't worry, I'm working on it. For some type of ideal maintance meld that can accommodate most every one and also be fun and challenging to most everyone I've been talking to Stan Zontek about analyzing pitch marks as an indicator of something that might be called a "fudge factor"---in other words those greens that have no ground game option and are strictly aerial demand can be maintained a bit more receptive to grandma's heaven wood than those greens that have reliable ground game approach options. And the good news with putting and chipping and such is that very few to no one would even notice the difference.
If it weren't that way grandma and her fellow travelers and weaker golfers who just can't develop the type of spin and control that good players can would never have a chance in hell of hitting and holding some of those no ground game option greens with their very best shots and if that happens with regularity don't you think that's going to turn into a real problem?