I think this is a huge fallacy as far as amateur golfers go. I rarely see anyone playing 7000 yards. Most courses I play at that have back tees (my previous home course stretched to 7450) and no one played back there. The owners stuck those tees in and they get less than 80 rounds a year -- all by visiting pros.
The other issue, as I see it, is that no one I play with -- and I play with some low handicappers -- smashes the ball 300 with any regularity. If the ground is firm a couple of us will get it there a couple of times a round -- maybe. If it is wet, a 260 drive is often very, very solid. I see no proof that amateurs regularly are hitting it that much farther.
I think this is a professional issue for pros who work on their games incessantly and have their equipment tweaked to a degree Jack Nicklaus in his prime could never have dreamed of.
We don't need to build 7700 yards
I think if you rolled back the ball it would really hurt the sport -- people who are already struggling for distance would simply stop playing. Kids like the power game -- watch any range with teenagers on it. They are working on finessing a feathery wedge. They are gripping and ripping -- and usually slicing 50 yards offline into a range net.
The truth is the R&A are tweaking one hole that played well over par in every Open -- for no real reason other than Peter Dawson is playing architect. He's just gotten Martin Hawtree to do his bidding.
I don't think you can extrapolate this ridiculous situation into the "plight of the game." Heck, I heard recently that Callaway issued a driver that one of their pros (a long hitter already) smacks 16 more yards. Guess what? I don't believe it.
Last year at the golf show in Orlando I sat in an interview with Mark King, pres of TaylorMade. He made the same claims -- the new R11 goes "20 yards longer" than the old one.
I told him they've set that every year there's a new driver -- and shouldn't the average player now hit it 340 regularly if that's the case.
He laughed and said I have a point.
COR restrictions on the driver means it can't get any hotter -- so what we are seeing is better shafts, better fitting and better fitness. Put those together with the ProV1 and you have professional -- not club pros, but tour pros -- hitting it a mile.
This is a professional issue, not an amateur problem.
Maybe my thinking is terribly provincial but to gauge the current situation I'm inclined to look no further than the Ocean Course a couple hours down I-26 from my home. That course can "torture" the best players in the world (at least those who are not named "Rors"). Yet it always provides a hugely enjoyable day of golf for a short-hitting bogey golfer like myself. Given that admittedly one-off example, I have a hard time seeing how either end of the spectrum is being harmed by the situation that currently obtains.
TOC is perfect as long as we want to continue to build 7700 yard courses