Bcowan, Not sure how this keeps getting back to caddies for you, but its irrelevant.
Brian Hoover, I agree with the post above. Not advocating every golf course adopt it. Some should try, some should put both cups out. See below, but I just don't see basing a business model on giving up market share willingly.
JeffW, while I mentioned minorities, your post (and its figurative and literal black and white thinking) sort of misses the point. I am sure we will attract white suburban young adults, teenagers and kids with some money well before the poorer get involved.
I see no value in wringing out the excess golfers. Certainly, existing facilities have to profit to bring any golf at all to the masses. You certainly can't base an industry model on driving away "undesirables" and hope to survive, even if golf effectively limited minorities, women, etc. for centuries. The big question is whether golf can survive as a relic for another generation? Or does it have to change? Or, at least, offer its version of street basketball?
Again, in even framing the question in golf strategy terms, it shows how set we are in our ways to new ideas that let others like golf the way they like it, and us like it the way we like it.
BTW, I agree that shorter courses plus large cups would be good starter grounds. I was impressed with the par 3 Challenge Course at MD. They still had 5 tees, with the shortest being chipping on to the green, second requiring maybe 9 iron, then a few more getting closer and closer to the variety of traditional par 3 lengths. Staff there tells me the chipping tees are popular. They also give new golfers a cheat sheet. Some are afraid to try golf because they don't even understand how to pay, get to the first tee, etc. I know, we laugh, but those are the kinds of things stopping GenX who would maybe try the game, but didn't grow up with caddie experience, golf in the family, etc.
It's funny because I know par 3 courses have never attained much popularity. I am skeptical that they will gain great ground now, but I have to tell you, the shorter course was made every shot doable and relevant to final score. Tee shots and long par 4 and 5 tweener shots really aren't that interesting. Playing all approach shots is sort of like skipping the commercials by using the VCR, or watching the highlights on ESPN without watching the boring 3 hour baseball game, and that kind of "hurry up" mentality, while not part of traditional golf, might appeal to our "yutes" and their shortened attention span......
Again, don't know, but certainly willing to think outside the box rather than just assume golf is best off by staying firmly rooted in the past. If anything, BTW, my gut tells me that a bunch of golfers playing the watered down version would make institutions like the Masters even more revered, as a nod to old school. Sort of like going to the prom to dress up....even with 100 tattoos.