I will happily stick with my assertion that the percentage of golf played in high level tournaments is quite low to the point of virtual statistical meaninglessness.
Why should the influence of shot patterns be limited to HIGH level tournaments when all golfers benefit from the technology ?
Patrick, it would be helpful if you would cease and desist from taking nips at the bottle while posting.
This conversation took a pronounced turn several days ago, with the emphasis apparently being that technology/increased distance hasn't made the game too easy for most of us
but the desire to ensure the classics were still relevant and challenging for the best in high level tournaments was strong (please see Shel's posts and our responses).
I'm not about to use clubs 20-40 years old and not get invited back again because I'm no longer competitive.
20 years old isn't 40 years old.
And green isn't red and a carrot isn't a tomato. Now that we have all that out of the way, you said you wouldn't use clubs 20-40 years old, and then you told Sean your irons are 20 years old and your putter is over 40 years old. As I asked above, please put the bottle away while posting--it becomes tough to follow you when your posts so clearly contradict each other.
Assuming for the sake of argument that not every round played at NGLA is a high level tournament round, what clubs do the members use for the non-tournament rounds?
How in the hell would I know ?
My mistake. I made the assumption, clearly a poor one, that you might actually see what your playing companions are using. I also assumed that someone with your passion for this issue, for the problem of increased distance and the effect it has on classic courses, might have bothered to maybe ask or even see firsthand what your friends or playing partners use and what effect it has on distance and classic courses. I didn't realize it was merely a theoretical issue for you and what the effects are in the real world were meaningless to you.
If they still use their new fangled gizmos (and I would be happy to wager lunch that the great majority do), why do you suppose they are so disinterested in interfacing with CBM's bunkers and other hazards and features?
How can you make the assumption that they're not interfacing with the architecture ?
Do you think that all of the members at NGLA hit the ball as I have for the last 40 years ?
In a current membership that might have an average age of 72 or more, I don't think any of those over the average age are flying the centerline bunkers on # 8
Patrick, you may not continue to have it all ways. Either the new equipment has removed the challenge or it has not. You have now been arguing both sides of the fence depending on what suits your needs at the moment. It might be easier for all of us if I retired to the sidelines and just let you publicly argue both sides of the issue.
Pity you and the NGLA members don't routinely play that way. Pity interfacing with CBM is so low on the priority list.
Why would I want to remain uncompetitive when it's my ability to be competitive that allows me to get invited to compete at NGLA
What's the big deal about being invited to play a course that is not challenging? Why would you even want to fight the traffic to schlepp to the far end of LI to play a course that with the new equipment is not challenging (though you say your clubs are 20-40 years, and that they are NOT 20-40 years old. Its so confusing) and further, one that you no longer interface with the architecture as CBM intended? Is the lunch really that good?
So you truly have no golfing friends that are interested in returning the challenge and interfacing with the architecture as you claim to desire??
Sure, some on this site plus others share my interest.
But, that doesn't extract them from playing for or under the same conditions that I play under.
.
.
.
.
Total = $ 9.825 for the day.
Do you think anyone is going to abandon their equipment in favor of equipment circa 1967-1987 ?
Patrick, while certainly would not wish to lose all ways in ya'alls game (my mind started to hurt just turning over the numbers), the fact remains that even if the numbers were 10 times that amount the base reality is still the same and no attempt to mask that with big bets will change that. You claim the challenge needs to be returned to the game, but you have yet to say
why? Really, in your world, what difference does it make how challenging the game is or even if you can or can't blow it 40 yards past the Bottle bunkers? All that matters, and you have made this quite clear, is whether you win or lose money, or whether you are competitive at NGLA and continue to receive invites to play a course that doesn't challenge either you or other good players.
Again, I think it is important to remember that there are tournament rounds, and then there is the great majority of rounds which are non-high level tournament.
Perhaps you missed the math exercise above and the reference to high competitive matches that don't involve the U.S. Open
No, actually you typed it a minute or two before you typed this section, so it would have been impossible for me to have seen it when I made my post which came many hours before you posted. Please tell me what it is exactly that you are imbibing while posting? I suspect it makes the world look much better
Also, for my peace of mind, please tell me that you understand that I couldn't have missed a post of yours that came after I posted? I don't need to send TEP and his orderlies in white to check on you, do I?
And I find it rather odd, and a little sad somehow, that the joy of the game, or the interfacing with the architecure which is the soul of the game and which I know you feel, is less important than always feeling like you need to have the latest and greatest to keep up with whomever you are playing with.
It's not odd.
I donate a reasonable amount of money to charities every year, I just don't want to donate money to those I'm competing against, and I don't want those that I play for pride to be given an undue advantage.
Again, you fall into the same bunker. If all that matters is the winning and the losing, then what clubs everyone uses and what level of challenge there is is meaningless. Whether a 78 man hits it as far now as he did when 48 means nothing--your definition and your outlook makes that abundantly clear. He either wins, or he loses, and whether he can fly it well past the Bottle bunkers or has to make decisons on the tee means less than nothing according to the Mucci Gospel. Just win baby!
You played Sand Hills last year with Huckaby et al. I know it was certianly not a high level tournament;
You couldn't be further off the mark.
It was an intense competition whereas, my rounds against Ran were ferociously competitive.
The beauty of golf and the point you miss is that you can be highly, if not ferociously, competitive without playing in the U.S. Open.
Patrick, I don't miss that at all. I agree. A pair of 25s can have incredibly competitive and fun matches. But that does not make it a high level tournament. Highly competitive DOES NOT equal high level.
You made the choice to travel all the why to Nebraska and bring equipment that removed much (all?) of the challenge of the fine course C&C created. What sense does that make? Why travel all that way for some challenge-less rounds? Again, was the lunch that good (don't answer that-I'm tired of hearing how good the burgers are at the turn
)
My match against Ran was one of the most competitive rounds I ever played, and I've played a few.
I gave him 12 shots, shot under par and lost on # 17 when a long putt he hit at warp speed hit a pebble, which deflected the ball's line causing it to hit the back of the hole, popping up into the air, and then down into the cup, which had to be repaired afterward. My brilliant birdie putt for the halve rimmed out and the man has been on cloud 9 ever since.
I would expect you to shoot under par--you are a very good player using equipment that (is either 20-40 years old or isn't) makes a course like Sand Hills virtually without challenge according to you.
Rumor has it that Ran actually placed his lucky pebble on the cup's edge and that is why your putt stayed out.
Again, percentage rounds in tournaments vs percentage not. Not even close.
You're wrong, 100 % of my rounds at NGLA are in tournaments
Sorry, you quoted a different percentage earlier. I really need to stop making the mistake of taking you at your word
(is it whiskey? Vodka?)
Also, that comment wasn't in relation to you and you alone. Truly, as hard as it may be to believe, there is more to the golfing universe than Mucci at NGLA
Of course, that may be a flaw in the universe....
PS If someone invited me to NGLA for tournament performance, they would get what they deserve for choosing poorly.
I believe that golfers with handicaps above 7 are not invited, You qualify in flights with NO handicap and you play your matches at scratch.
Ooh, there is still hope for me! When should I check my mailbox?