JES II,
One of the problems few want to address is the following.
If the green is altered, and it stimps at 13 for the U.S. Open,
How will it perform its architecturally intended purpose when the Open leaves town and green speeds are dramatically reduced ?
I suspect that the members will inherit an inferior product, one only made viable when the green speeds approach or exceed 13.
So, what will that forebode ?
More speed, more softening of other greens ?
It's a destructive cycle with but one end, and that is that the distinctive life and the character will be squeezed out of green after green, in Ardmore and elsewhere, making greens more alike and mundane.
That the U.S.G.A. doesn't see the long term ramifications of this policy is more than surprising, especially when you re-read Ron Prichard's letter to them, authored more than a decade ago.
Shame on the members for permitting this travesty to be forced upon their great golf course.