Pete
“Wasn't one of the early architectural principles to have an 'easy' starting hole? Presumably because your golf wasn't warmed up on a range?”
In Scotland the architectural principal was to offer a challenge to the golfer, yet this seems no longer the criteria that many work to achieve in our modern enlightened era.
May I humbly suggest that before making that type of statement you should get out the Hickory and Gutty ball and try again over some of our most testing and challenging courses which have served golfers for over a century and a half.
Interesting opinion but perhaps your comment would be better served to The R&A showing that our great courses are constantly being eroded by the advent on UNCONTROLLED technology.
I would like to add a comment regards the topic being discussed. ‘The Advent and Evolution of the Driving Range’ While I agree that these ranges offer many golfers the facility to practice and achieve (perhaps what they consider is the key to the game – consistency in distance shots), they are as close to boring the pants off any one who enjoys the game for what it represents, the test of skill and a challenge.
Alas our society is so set on the path of always winning, not realising that sometimes in winning we lose so dreadfully badly because we ignore the finer points of the game. Don’t believe me then just look to Afghanistan & Iraq – battles won - war lost.
Golf is not about distance, this is a modern virus that has infected the game and the minds of many. The real challenge and skill is in the ability to understand how to navigating around a course unaided calling upon shots that required real confidence to perform. Or has that become just too difficult for many of the modern golfer.
Golf is not a pissing contest but one of awareness and skill to rise to the challenge. The ability to get up and continue after a devastating shot, regrettable this is not taught at Driving Ranges but come from within.
Never forget ‘The Game is afoot. However, thanks to some modern players and designers, I feel the following seems to apply ‘ Men's evil manners live in brass; their virtues we write in water’. ‘A countenance more in sorrow than in anger’.
Yet ‘The Game is afoot’ with The R&A in deep discussion on how to dismiss rolling back the ball by their secret formula ‘Eye of newt and toe of frog, wool of bat and tongue of dog’ yet history cries out to the Governing Body ‘How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child’, nevertheless ‘Woe is me’ for ‘A foolish thought, to say a sorry sight’.
But then I would rather see golfers practice at a Driving Range than on one of our busy courses.
Melvyn