For some reason, when they used to say the winning score was 279 or 282 or 287, it seemed more palatable, and also cooler.
Maybe because when it was listed as total shots played, it was pretty clear that the winner was the best golfer that week, i.e. the one with the lowest number of strokes next to his name.
But when it was turned by into a score relative to par, and that score got to minus 20, somehow it seemed to become more about the golf course than the golfer, or the quality of the golf played.
And as soon as the discussion becomes about the golf course, it seems to become binary (especially in the context of a major championship), i.e. does the golf course test the best players in the world or does it not?
The trouble is, that question-answer allows for very little nuance; it's either yes or no. And no one wants a championship test that doesn't test the best golfers in the world.
Peter