AG,
learning to hit a ball a set distance with a set swing using a specific wedge is not about hitting the ball that distance but about building up a feel for hitting a ball to the target. Were your assumption to be correct then the PGA tour players would use yardages for 20, 30, 40 yard shots but they do not. You take a PGA pro and ask them to hit ten balls to 10 flags spaced at 5 yard increments from 20 yards onwards but in a random sequence each ball will end up within 10 foot of its flag. You ask the same pro to hit 10 balls over a wall which blocks their view and you will find that the results haphazard.
That all the pros use yardage is because it makes it easier by removing a skill from the game. Where as you would not want to watch players hit shots of lesser quality and others might delight in the higher skill level shown by a correctly judged shot unaided by outside help
It is neither better nor worse than your opinion just a different but equally valid point of view.
Jon
Jon,
I take your point that there might be people that enjoy watching shots struck without the aid of knowing the distance. There are people who enjoy watching the skills challenges on The Big Break; I don't.
What I find amusing and, quite frankly, simplistic is the idea/belief that estimating distance rather than knowing distance is somehow more in keeping with the traditions of the game and preserves the purity of the game, when there is NO evidence of that.
Until somebody can cite a primary (or even a reliable secondary!) source that proves to me that Old Tom and Young Tom and Harry and James and Francis and the others didn't know distances from various points on the course, and didn't pace from those points to aid in club selection, I'll just continue to harbor a suspicion that they did! And if I use my very, very limited powers of imagination, I can even imagine those guys writing things down on paper and having notes to refer to. Of course, I don't know that, just as Duncan and Sean and others don't know that those guys were just "eyeballing" and pulling a club. But I DO know which of those two options seems more plausible to me...
Further, I see ZERO grounds in logic for distinctions between various ways of calculating distance. Whether one paces from some marker, be it a sprinkler head or a 150 marker or a bush or a bunker, or whether one has a yardage book or a GPS or a laser, it's all the same. The GPS and laser just have the advantage of being a LOT faster.
So I'll say it again: The idea that estimating distance ONLY with one's eyes is a fundamental skill of golf has no basis in fact or history until somebody shows me evidence. I'll go farther and give my OPINION that estimating distance, while perhaps an admirable skill, is more about one's eyesight and one's experience ON THAT COURSE than it is about determining who is the better golfer.