Don & Pete,
I have to agree with Brian on this issue.
Shouldn't the practice putting green be essentially reflective of the conditions of the putting surfaces on the golf course ?
Isn't that the purpose of a practice putting green ?
Isn't the practice putting green the REAL first green on any golf course.
To deliberately set different stimp speeds on different greens tells me that there is something a fen in Denmark.
After putting on the practice putting green, and greens
#1, 2, 3, and 4, how would any golfer know that the speed on green # 5 is 20 % slower then the first five, or that the
6th green will revert back to the first five, or replicate the
6th green, or be 10 % slower then the first five greens ?
It's a formula for disaster.
And worse yet, it sets a precedent for golf clubs across the nation to deliberately mow their greens to different speeds instead of trying to obtain global consistency, within the framework of agronomic prudence..
And, I understand the agronomic variables, but we're not talking about them, we're talking about hole locations that the standard speeds, as set for the week, can't tolerate, and thus, the powers that be are suggesting different speeds on those greens where the hole locations would be considered DICEY at best.
It's a formula for disaster, not just for the tournament, but for the dangerous precendent it sets throughout the Nation.
Clubs will cite the USGA doing it for the Open, so it must be okay for us. Despite repeating myself,
It's a formula for disaster.