Jud
So what is an acceptable difference of yardage between players in a match?
We can argue about exact solutions, but that is different discussion that acknowledging something is out of whack. Personally, I would be satisfied with anything more akin to what it was before this latest distance explosion at the top end, or with any other point going backward from there in the history of golf.
It is my understanding this difference has grown steadily (or not) since there were good players and bad players - so since the game was invented.
What is your basis for understanding that the gap between long and short has been steadily growing since the beginning of golf? What is your basis for viewing this latest leap as part of this progression?
I ask because, near as I can tell, distance has not steadily increased but rather increased lockstep with the adoption of technological advances, and his latest jump in distance not only dwarfs all the others in terms of sudden distance increases, it may also differ from other advances in that its benefit has been concentrated with those who already hit the ball farther.
It seems like folks may be saying thaey lament the difference between good players in a match and generally between good and great players. Perhaps as well that too many people can now hit the ball further than great players. Is this the case? If so, I would argue the same thing is said by every generation.
You can argue it, but again I don't think reality backs you up. Near as I can tell the jump is unprecedented in actual increase and concentrated impact.
So how far is too far for the long ball?
Really Sean? Look at the increase in 400+ yard drives on tour and tell me that you don't think we are well past the point of asking such obviously rhetorical questions.
When is a distance differential in a match too much? Would rolling the back 5, 10 or 20 percent make a difference? Sure, I ask these questions a bit rhetorically, but only to highlight the individual nature of the responses. There is no set answer, but I guarantee you that if folks want to control distance to have a fun in a match, they don't need a USGA command to do so. You really can't figure out a way to have a fun match with your son? If this is the crux of the argument I have somehow missed the importance of it.
You seem to be using these rhetorical questions to quibble over the minutia of the solutions rather than even acknowledging the problem. To answer your rhetorical question, a roll back large enough topreserve our great courses by eliminating the reason they are being ruined would make a hell of a difference.
I am not trying to be snarky, only straight forward. Last Saturday I hit a monstrous drive at Burnham's 2nd hole. I went past all the fairway bunkers and was nearly level with the left greenside bunkers on a 380 yard hole - I guess it was a 325 yard drive - 50 yards past the furthest I have ever been on that hole - once or twice. The result was a bogey. I tell you this for two reasons. First, golf is about getting the ball in the hole. Second, I figure I hit it 325 yards which is an immense distance. Most golfers way over-estimate how far they hit it (just as they way over-estimate wind strength). This has always been the case and will continue to be so in the future.
Are you denying things of have changed? Really? Where have you been the past 10 years?
Driving distance makes a difference as to how golf holes play, and whether certain aspects of architecture remains functional. The relative driving distance is also important as to how architecture functions. These two factors have significantly changed in the past decade or so, and courses are being screwed up because of this.
Your idealistic self-help, grassroots solution has no hope of succeeding, and for good reason. Whether or not you or I have found a way to continue to enjoy the game despite the technological changes, golf is a game defined by rules, and understandably, many want to continue to play by those rules and do what they can under those rules to shoot the lowest score on to win their match. That is after all what they are supposed to do under the rules. So expecting a self-help solution out of them is not only unrealistic, it is arguably contrary to their understanding of how the game should be played. (Is it even within the rules to agree to your own equipment standards, or is that a waiver of the rules?) It might be nice if the average golfer approached the game as you might, but that ain't going to happen, and if anything changes it will come from the rules, not the golfer.
And while I very much enjoy playing with old equipment, my doing so isn't going to change the rules and it isn't going to save any golf courses. It is a game, played by rules, and the rules need to be be addressed.