Front page of the new York Times
"In a hole, golf considers digging a wider one"
Talk about wreaking of desperation.
trots out NGF statistics about losing 5 million players in the last decade.
Frist of all this organization's dubious statistics led those who bought their crap to believe we needed hundreds of shitty courses on every corner, complete with subdivision.
Second, I would argue that "golf is cool" crowd that jumped on the bandwagon 10-15 years ago were never going to stay in and contributed to others quitting by clogging up courses with their "cool" attitudes, and little knowledge of anything else, and other nonsense.
Golf is not cool.
It's a fantastic game and a fantastic opportunity for kids, grownups and seniors alike to participate and thrive in a positive, challenging outdoor enviroment.
That's not for everyone as many people don't want a challenge, don't want to be outdoors, and aren't positive.
I'm OK with leaving them behind, the same as I have no problem leaving some behind in the "no child left behind" programs that lower standards and suck down all....but I digress.........
This article depresses the crap out of me and I find it embarrassing, particularly the comments from the President of the PGA of America.
Go out and do your jobs-help a kid, introduce a friend, run top intro and access programs for all, but let's not dumb it down to include those who simply should do something else that's easier, who should instead step up to the challenge, rather than have the bar lowered to them.
Anyone who knows me knows I'm all for fun ways to play golf, fun games for kids, fun tournaments, and I administrate one of the most nonstuffy unconventional golf cultures in America, but at the end of the day we still promote golf and its ideals.
Interesting that they use a player who's about 3-4 8 foot putts short of having a couple majors to promote a larger hole, and I find his comments that his FIVE YEAR OLD quit the game because he failed absolutely laughable.
So he'd still be playing if the hole was four times as big?
I have no desire to see golf become like other sports. They should aspire to be what golf is all about, not the other way around.