Being the major country club sports, golf and tennis have always had somewhat of a rivalry. In the 1970s during the tennis boom, tennis surpassed golf in popularity. In the 1980s golf regained its supremacy while tennis faded.
This shift was apparent to me last Friday when I played an uninspiring Chicago-suburb private club. Three tennis courts without nets sat empty with weeds growing through the cracks. Personally, I grew up a tennis player and captained my high school team. Now, I rarely play. Why has golf dominated this rivalry?
1. Architecture
- The 1980s began a period of massive construction of new golf courses. While we can all criticize some of the designs, they were clearly an improvement upon the courses of the prior decades. New golf courses attract interest to the game.
2. Real Estate
- If you build tennis courts, the homes around it will not sell at a premium. Golf courses sell real estate.
3. Demographics
- An aging population with more wealthy people seems to favor golf. While I know 90-year olds who still play doubles, many give up the game and concentrate on golf as they get into retirement age.
4. Social
- No one's inked a business deal over a tennis match. There's really little time for idle chitchat. Four hours on a golf course gives you plenty of time to build relationships.
5. Golf's handicap system allows you to play with anybody
- Tennis is painful if you don't have two people of somewhat equal abilities, which is hard to find. I'm a member of a Chicago-city gym that has 9 tennis courts. I only can think of two people that I feel like playing against. With golf, the only requirement for me as a playing partner is pace-of-play. Shoot, I have a great time playing with my mom.
6. Technology
- Tennis racket technology has killed the serve-and-volley game, or any finesse game completely. You have to serve hard and stay at the baseline and pound forehands and backhands, which is less exciting than a McEnroe-Connors match. With golf, yes, technology is threatening the viability of some classics for tournament play, but most golfers love the new equipment and the ruling bodies have slowed it down.
7. Golf has expanded beyond its roots
- Sure, there are hundreds of courses that the average golfer doesn't have a prayer of playing, but guys like Arnold Palmer and Tiger Woods have expanded the game beyond the blue-blazer crowd. The USGA, by holding US Opens at places like Torrey Pines and Bethpage, has done a great job promoting the game. Tennis is seen by more people as the elitist game.
8. Golf's more fun
- Some of the best tennis players in the world (Ivan Lendl for one) are avid golfers. I don't know of one pro golfer who plays much tennis. Could it be that golf is just more fun? I agree strongly.
Well, that's a stab at it. Discuss.