Doug,
In fact, that is what we do, although I think I meant to type 140. There are many women who regularly hit it 160, and many find playing from the men's senior tees fits them, but it is a course to course thing. I agree we don't need to make greens reachable after a poor tee shot, only the good ones.
Duncan,
Yours sounds like a very unenlightened view! It echoes the "that's good enough for them because I say so" attitude most men in golf have.......
Please tell me that you would be pleased as punch to hit driver, 3W, 3W, 7 iron to every par 4, and then tell me why I should condemn anyone to do that via design? Or subject them to the wrath of angry golfers behind them for slow play? Would you even play?
I agree some women may "accept" what is offered because of the lure of golf, but in my experience, when given a better alternative, the gravitate to a more fun layout where the repetition of what you suggest is eliminated. I sincerely doubt that they are as happy as can be.
Now I do agree its hard to actually accomplish, having tried, and there are going to probably be some holes on any course where they just have to accept the long par 4 as a par 5, like many senior men do. But, I set a goal of all 18 being reachable in regulation because I know I am going to fall somewhat short. If I set it at 50%, I might end up with no holes reachable in regulation. And, the next level of design goes beyond pure yardage reduction to making sure those playing the forward tees have some interesting challenges, too.
BTW, while most women (and men) have handicaps of 20-36, stats show that the majority who are worse than that simply have no handicap at al, driving up the numbers of the poor golfer way up, and suggest more design consideration for them, as opposed to placing it all on the 0.1% at the top, as so many do.