If you'll indulge me, I think I can get this thread to the point where it's actually (tangentially) about architecture!
I've long been fascinated by trying to figure out the actual difference between a Tour Pro's game and a "scratch" amateur. Over the last several years, this conundrum has come into sharper focus as I've consistently had the opportunity to play with and around many tour pros at my home club. We host both Champions Tour and Web.com Q-School, and both Rickie Fowler and Tom Pernice, Jr. play at the club regularly.
There have been multiple threads here about more or less the same subject, with one famously being about where one would need to place one's ball in the fairway to play a Tour Pro straight up.
I think that these conversations do matter to architecture, because I think that course distance is such a divisive topic that anything shedding light on the distance or skill-related points of golf is something that should/could be discussed here. I will, however, leave that determination to Ran, of course.
So here goes:
Let's say that Rickie Fowler, Tom Pernice, Jr., and two legit young pros (one a four-time first team All-WCC selection at Pepperdine who made it to the finals of Q-School last year; the other played on the Oklahoma State golf team and just turned pro) were to play four scratch (all of us in our forties or fifties) amateurs in a two best balls of four mini-tournament with no strokes, but with a substantial yardage advantage on each hole.
What do you think the outcome would be if the pros played the blacks (7,157/75.7/146) and we played the whites (6,010, 69.7/128). The venue is the home course for all eight players, so there's no advantage there in terms of "comfort" or "course knowledge." This time of year the greens are extremely firm and fast. So firm that a full wedge shot barely makes an indentation in the greens and they are running 12.5 to 13 on the stimp.
Is that a fair bet? Lopsided? If so, what way? And what, if any, impact does architecture have in the discussion? If this were a "Golden Age" course, would it matter? Does the fact that the course we played on is an early Jack Nicklaus super-penal aerial-only (for the most part) course play a role in your thoughts? If so, why? If not, why not?
Interested to see the responses.
And HAPPY NEW YEAR everyone!