So Jeff are you advocating for more trees, more rough or both?
If I owned a course that had 125 yard fairways, I would be advocating for more of one or the other or both-yes.(if nothing else for cost)
ironically, I used to have these same discussions about technology, as early as the early 90's when the J driver came out and the Big Bertha, especially after a buddy of mine played the inagural Hogan Tour and informed me everybody was playing Big berthas and killing it.
But i was assured that the distance gains were maxed out, and the USGA reported for 10 years straight that the 3 yard average driving
gains were insignificant.
I can certainly see how a one year jump might not be due to possible wet measuring conditions, a small sample size.etc. but even though I'm no math major 10 straight years of increases (ironically those small sample size errors NEVER went backwards) =s 30 yards- pretty significant.
Just because you're 100% right about all the excess crap in golf that needlessly drives up costs, doesn't mean we should allow a industry sales driven trend (super fast greens) to alter the game, playing surfaces, and placement of cups-to say nothing of driving costs up-in a negative manner.
I do think you're right about bermuda being far less of an issue as it's a warm weather grass, but I do see way too many cool weather grass courses with lightning fast greens which are kept too moist and therefore too soft in order to survive the summer heat.
To say nothing of losing good pins and many times good, interesting greens.
I had a great talk with the super at Palmetto yesterday.
I asked him if the same guys who told him the greens were too slow were the same ones who told him he had "illegal pins out there" when the greens were at speed they liked.
He had a knowing look and replied yes.
He also said there were quite a few greens where they really only had one or two pins when the greens went dormant in winter (making them fast and pleasing the more speed crowd)
Palmetto's greens can have incredibly fast putts when going downhill, where a six inch error can lead to a 20 foot difference in result.
and a pin high putt on some greens may require 15 feet of break.
That's when they're running about 9.5
I'm just not sure why running them at 11-12 (and reworking 7-12 greens and losing all good pins, never using sloped placements) would make the golf better, other than being able to feel good when his d-bag friends from the vapid Sage Valley flower garden came calling.