I am not sure I buy the claim in an article that a competitive golfer prefers a more testing course. A fun golf course is a fun golf course whether one plays it from a competitive or a recreational mindset.
I do find that when I am playing in a stroke play competition I have less fondness for features that can blow up your score such as out of bounds, lost ball opportunities or water hazards that lead to a nasty drop location. I find that I need to play very conservatively around such features which yields a better score but is not that much fun.
Jason--
Appreciate your thoughts. As to your first sentence, I have found that a lot of golfers who equate (perhaps falsely, in many cases) difficult golf with good golf would generally be located more toward the competitive end of the spectrum. My own personal experience suggests to me that the more recreational golfers would be less likely to be bummed out by a course being quite easy, if that makes sense. I fully concede that there are exceptions on both sides, though.
I do agree with your second sentence, but again I think those more or less universally beloved courses don't need to be considered with regard to the spectrum I'm thinking about.
I'm struck by your observation that it's less fun to play conservatively, even though you shoot lower scores. I'm tempted to extrapolate from that statement that you may locate yourself more toward the recreational end of the spectrum, despite how much fun I know you have playing for signed dollars!
To me, yes, fun golf shots and holes are enjoyable in a vacuum (Jim Engh's Creek Club at Reynolds always sticks out to me here as a course I find to be the bees' knees despite being very much a recreational/"fun"-oriented course), but I find the ultimate pleasure in solving the riddle a course poses through sensible tactical play, leading to a lower-than-usual score. Interestingly, the most satisfying round of competitive golf I've played in recent memory was one of the most conservative I've ever played, but I executed my game plan and felt a great sense of accomplishment for having done it. Also, the course was not one that's ever going to win any architecture awards.
Mark--
That's a terrific point, and a corollary to a one of the central debates we have on this site: what makes a course better suited to match play or stroke play? I would offer that, for better or worse, the subset of competitive golfers who play match play to the near-complete exclusion of stroke play are a very small one. I always think about Tobacco Road as the ur-match play course.
Jeff B--
Ultimately I don't think the survey we embedded in the article meets the standard of "unbiased research," but I do think it may say something about the Golf Advisor audience at the very least. I do find it interesting just how overwhelmingly the respondents put themselves in the "competitive" category despite the well-known fact that handicaps have been pretty much flat over the recent decades. Much as golfers want to get better, it's not clear that they're achieving those stated goals!