Sean, our games -- and outlooks -- are remarkably mostly for their similarity, not their differences.
I am not a bad player, but I say to you with all sincerity, the Pro V1 and other urethane balls have meant little or nothing to me. And I am a way-above average golfer, in terms of mere recreational players.
And so, if what we are talking about is a "threat" to the existence of the Pro V1, that is really a non-issue for me.
You make a good point that nobody at OHCC asked you before they brought in Rees Jones to butcher the 15th hole and build some ridiculous new tees, basically every place that they had room for them. Here's a point I hope you'll agree with. Just about all of the changes at OHCC were made for the purpose of better golf; every change that was made, was made in an effort to defend against longer driver and overall distances. (15's added bunker, where the tee could not be moved back. A narrowed 2nd fairway and additional bunkering where that tee could not be moved back. A new tee at 5, and an absurd new tee at 8, requiring a 200-yard walk from the 7th green. A new tee at 14, just because there was some space to do it. And a new tee adding length to 17, even though the green was not designed for a tee shot from the mid-200-yard range.) Only the changes to Hole 7 (which had been changed earlier by Jones, Sr.) were actual improvements to the course.
To be very honest, Sean, I don't know why the OHCC members are so sanguine about it. I'd be an even greater rollback advocate after seeing what was done to 15, if the changes were put to me for approval.
Again, Sean, I have never, ever, not once, advocated a ball rollback because the game is "too easy" for me. I am an advocate only because I believe in two simultaneous principles:
1) All of golf should be played by one set of rules, and;
2) Distances, especially driver distances, of the elites, are making classic championship courses, and thereby a large part of golfing history, obsolete, through advances in technology.
So I say, scale the balls back, to better fit the existing courses, and continue to allow technology and innovation from the manufacturers under new equipment rules and regulations. I am not anti-technology, and I am certainly not a Luddite.