Another point about the recent USGA Newsletter which is pretty much entirely about the distance issue both historically, scientifically, politically and philosophically, is that it asks the question a number of time that if a rollback was enacted what would they rollback to?
This question is asked in the October issue of the USGA Newsletter. On the other hand, just last Sunday at the Lesley Cup 85 of us listened to Dick Rugge (Senior Director of the USGA Tech Center) state that the USGA is happy with where distance is now and that the goal is to control it where it is now (but with this caveat that it should not increase "significantly" from here).
On the other hand, the USGA said approximately six months ago by public letter that they are seriously looking at two technical areas of I&B----first what they refer to as "spin generation" (the ball) and second MOI (the golf club).
That letter and the recent Newletter implies they are looking at those two areas perhaps with an eye to adding regulations to those two areas.
I'm quite certain that the USGA/R&A has never regulated "spin rate" ("spin generation"?) in any way in the past or presently. But let's say this is an indication of what the USGA/R&A is going to do in the future (otherwise why did they make that letter public?).
The question then becomes at what rate would they regulate spin? Would it be at the rate that balls like the PROV are presently at, or perhaps something that might be at a higher spin rate than balls like PROVs have now?
It may also be their intended scenario to get the manufacturers to agree to this and bring compliance to the new rule in around 2010 or something like that which has been their lead-in time frame for compliance to new I&B rules and regs in the past.
And if all this was agreed to "under the radar screen" we very well may have an effective distance rollback for particularly the long hitter contingent in our future.
In essence it could be sort of a reversal of the technical scenario that effected this distance spike in the first place beginning perhaps 15 or so years ago. Very few seem to be aware how that distance spike technically happened (the technology that created it) and very few may be aware in the future how it was technically removed.
It would not surprise me at all if this is what the USGA/R&A is presently considering trying to do. But the key would be the technical reasons for an effective reduction would fly under the radar screen about the same way the technical reasons for the distance spike did in the last number of years. If this really is what they may be trying to do and they pull it off, I'd say it's a pretty clever move!
At the very least, I'd think it would a whole lot easier for the manufacturers to agree to this type of "under the radar" scenario than if this whole distance issue and the technical reasons for the spike and a possible reduction were made completely public. It would basically allow the manufacturers to preserve and perpetuate their old "myth" about what their balls and implements can do for you distance-wise.