Count me as unconvinced that we are making the game too hard.
But let's at least ask the right question.
We are making the game too hard compared to what?
One measure might be the kinds of courses we revere from the Golden Age. We've all seen the drawings, the topos and the aerials.
Is there any serious question that the best of those courses were less forgiving, rougher, rawer (per the designer) than courses designed today? They were much harder on the mediocre golfer than modern courses.
When was the last top shot bunker built? Egan's waste areas at Pebble, ditto for ANGC, the sheer nuttiness of Ross's, MacK's, Crump's, Raynor's green contours and green surrounds. You'll only see them in faded pictures. Somebody today builds something like MacK's 5th, 7th or 17th at Crystal, they're fired on the spot.
I could go on.
Virtually all of that wackiness and rawness is gone now. Bunkers have been removed, contours smoothed out, unpleasant surprises minimized. There is a tendency to forget that the Golden Age was an age of edgy, bold, hardass golf courses.
Worse, when Golden Age courses are restored, whatever else may get rebuilt, that edginess, the rawness, the unpredicability of the old courses is almost never restored. Something much more domesticated - as in "tame" - is built in their place.
I can cite example after example. Just last week at The Broadmoor there were pictures from the 30's of the Ross course. The first thing that strikes you is how wild the greens and bunkering were. Wacky green angles fed into ten foot deep bunkers. Crazy stuff.
The second thing that strikes you about those pictures is that there is no way on this green earth that any club today will have the guts to restore those golfing challenges. It won't happen. And they certainly wouldn't pay to build a new course with those sorts of thrills and spills.
But this is the funny part. Notwithstanding those brutal, unforgivng golf courses from 80 years ago, golf was never healthier. It's growth curve was a rocketship to the moon, cut short only by the Great Depression.
Golf can be boring. There are too many golf courses today that have lost the edginess and unpredictability that were the stock and trade of the Golden Age. That is a much, much more serious threat to the future of the game than new courses that are too challenging and full of nasty surprises.
Bob