Saw MHM on Facebook this morning, ranting against those who rant against his rants! Interesting how these websites now cross polinate. I disagreed with Melvyn, but wish him well. Perhaps this should be a separate thread, but with him gone, perhaps this thread should be dedicated not to his argumentative ways, but to his arguments themselves?
I'll bite, because it's a pretty short retort.
1. Land fit for purpose. I think everyone around here agrees, but recognizes design and development does not happen in a vacuum. Most everyone adores natural courses built upon ideal links land, but there is only so much of it around, and it's not always near populated enough areas to support golf. Furthermore, if we only built course on land fit for purpose, I question whether or not these few precious courses would be overrun with players since we'd have waaaaaaaay fewer courses.
2. Carts. I see nothing wrong with having the option. There are times when my feet can't handle another 18, so I will ride. Melvyn's dogmatic perspective seems to throw the baby out with the bathwater.
3. Distance aids. This seems way overblown. Play a golf course often enough and you will have a sense of your distances after about 10 rounds, IMHO. For most mere mortals, the game is hard enough as it is. I may know I need to hit it 150 to the center of the green, but pulling this off is quite another thing. Furthermore, last time I checked distance aids do not provide you with an MPH reading on the wind. 150 yd stakes do not tell you how many feet uphill or downhill your next shot is. Nor do they give any indication of just how firm or soft the incoming terrain may be. My point is that even when equipped with yardages, the golfer must still rely on their instincts, perception and acumen to properly gauge the shot to hit in order to successfully navigate the golf hole.
In conclusion, I have ZERO problem with people playing golf as Melvyn ranted about. Nobody is forcing you to play the Castle Course at St. Andrews, nobody is forcing you to ride a cart (with a few exceptions) and nobody is forcing you to utilize a rangefinder (I don't really trust those things that well anyways.)
Last time I checked, golf is just about as popular as it has ever been, so I find it difficult to believe that all our "modern amenities" have lessened the game. It's just evolving, that's the bottom line, not for better, necessarily, not for worse (unless you are a dogmatist stuck in the past.)
I watch antique roadshows, I am fascinated with golden era courses and all things old. I'll follow the little lady to vintage stores, I watch Pawn Stars because I might learn something about cool old relics from the past.
But not all change is bad (nor is all change good.) I feel quite confident that the skills Webb Simpson utilized in winning the U.S. Open two weeks ago are very similar to the skills Old Tom Morris used in winning tournaments back in the day.
Most of Melvyn's beliefs were revealed in about the span of a week. We heard it, we considered it, we "attempted" to discuss it.
Color me someone who is glad he's gone. He brought the entire intellect of the website down with his same 'ol same 'ol vitriol. He'd act like a total jackass to people who dared question him. As someone else pointed out earlier, to boot, he couldn't develop a cogent argument to save his life. Internet troll....keyboard warrior....call it what you will, but he certainly didn't "get" how we in the modern era discuss. There has to be a give and take, and sometimes, as we all know, you have to agree to disagree.....AND MOVE ON.
He could never MOVE ON.