Is the notion that courses are better if they play firm and fast in danger of causing the same amount of damage that the idea that greens must be fast to be considered good?
At the risk of upsetting some people on board here, I feel that many are taking this concept and applying it across the board to all courses as a measure of how good a course is.
This is essentially the same mindset that began when fast greens grew in the public perception of what quantifies a good golf experience. I can recall countless times hearing from golfers that this or that course was great simply because it had fast greens. This notion was then carried back to their course and pressure was applied to have their course meet this new standard of greatness.
I feel that the belief of firm and fast is now creeping more into the greater golfing public consciousness and people are starting to latch onto this new indicator of how their golf course stacks up against others. As was/is experienced with the fast greens idea, the saying about a little bit of knowledge making a person dangerous is very much in play here.
As many participants on here loathe the stimpmeter, there was great support for the firmness measuring device(
http://golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,34027.0.html.) I see this tool providing uneducated people with so called data to direct the maintenance of the course they play.
Well, as a former Greens Chairman who pushed the former Superintendent to turn off the water, cut the fairways to a reasonable playing height and push the hell out of our sand top dressing program on old push up greens, I can say that the membership of our club didn't get it. The average age of the membership was 60+ and they were quite happy sweeping the golf ball off of 1" turf. So much so that they voted me off the board as a sitting Vice President and incoming President. Much to my delight, not before I could hire a new Superintendent who gets it too.
This post to me highlights the possible situation we are heading for. It is exactly the same mentality that that gained momentum with the push for faster greens.
Im am not implying that firm and fast has no place in golf, I am trying to get across that there is no one set of standards to apply to all golf courses. I am of the opinion that a golf courses conditioning/maintenance should be determined by the underlying structure such as soil types and contouring. Trying to maintain a course in a manner that is not in harmony with the land is just a recipe for disaster and it is normally the superintendent who suffers the consequences.
As I stated in another post, an understanding of architecture does not automatically make a person knowledgeable in the field of turf and agronomy.