The modern period of design is dead – if only that was true and we could kill of the need for long courses.
What on earth is the attraction for 7,600 or 8,000 yard courses?
For me the attraction of playing is down to the challenge of the course not the distance. The whole of modern golf is revolving around distance. From the lengths of course, to knowing the exact distance from the hole, to the extent that some of you guys have a problem if you try and play without this information.
Distance craving is IMHO becoming the actual root of all evil in golf. Don’t believe me then ask Robert Warren how he played recently without using distance information and he may confirm that it hurt his score. That is not to say he can’t play because he can, it’s just his mindset is on distance, not gauged from his eyes but from outside info. Stop that outside information and he is unable to naturally judge distance through his eyes. The analogy is clear to me in that its take time for the body to regain control, as with drugs, drink, etc. But distance information is proving to be an addiction that when a player tries to play without them, his score is affected. (No disrespect intended Robert).
I hope that after all this turmoil in the world (both financial and environmental) is resolved the Governing Bodies of Golf finally wake up to the ills of our contemporary (modern) golf. Hopefully starting with distance and introducing a new ball that may combat this problem. Well that would be a good reason to start a new age of GCA.
’The modern period of design is dead’? No, because many still believe that Big is everything, yet IMHO they totally miss what golf is all about and what architects for the last 150 years have strived to achieve.