More thoughts..
It’s nice to think that a grass-roots campaign could cause golf governing bodies to roll back equipment, but it can’t happen.
Because those of us in this forum are a very small minority.
Because the “average” golfers are buying the hot equipment and listening to the marketing. (I played just yesterday with a guy who had an expensive rangefinder that he used on every shot, and had TWO $400 drivers in his bag – identical with different lofts, yet seldom got a ball airborne or over 150 yards. He lost at least a dozen Pro-V’s. Even the “magic tees” that he must have gotten from a late night Golf Channel infomercial, didn’t save him. A target golf consumer!)
Because PGA players are not going to rally for equipment rollback – they get paid by the manufacturers.
Because the governing bodies fear manufacturers inventing different variations of the game. Industry golf sellers have already started with “Foot Golf” “Top Golf” “Flog”, etc. In addition to fear of legal battles, there is always the fear that governing bodies lose control of governance of these game variants.
Using baseball limits as an example is flawed. The market dollars for baseball equipment is insignificant to that for golf equipment. How much money do people spend on baseball bats? Have you ever seen a baseball player endorsing baseball equipment or wearing a hat or shirt with the bat manufacturer name on it?
Suggestions..
The best hope that I can see is to hold the line on course lengthening. Club members doing this is the only chance, albeit slim. If courses stay the same, pro & top amateur golf starts to look dumb, with driver-wedge every hole. That might emphasize the need to control equipment. When PGA revenue starts to be affected by fans losing interest, that would drive home the need to change equipment to make the pro game interesting again. Maybe even bifurcation, as the pro game and what the average golfing/equipment buying slob plays are two different games.
Course raters are a small group, with a majority who love the tradition of the game. Perhaps they can be influenced to not use course length so heavily as a ranking factor. Rate the course on appeal to the average golfer, not to the professionals.