James Reader:
Thank you for posting the link above.
There has been so much b.s. in this thread already that I don't know if anyone is thinking anymore, or just reacting, but I would like to direct the conversation toward one of John Low's points that seems to have been abandoned by good players today:
"The good architect will see to it that the hole proclaims that the powerful player who wishes to register the par figure, must keep well to the right or well to the left with tee shot at two-shot and three-shot holes, and so in each stroke there shall be some special interest for him, some special manœuvre as that practiced by the skillful billiard player who always has in mind the next stroke or strokes ahead . . ."
When I was starting our project in Houston, I read a couple of books about the way Tour players strategize around the course today - if you can call it that. It no longer has anything to do with trying to position themselves for the next strokes ahead; it's all about taking a penalty out of play 99% of the time. And the best players in the world today apparently need a 65-yard-wide target to do just that . . . because modern equipment has them swinging so hard and then hitting wedges into par-4 greens.
Does anyone think that Jones or Hogan or Nicklaus didn't concern themselves with angle of approach? We have lost the strategic element of the game, because modern players are LESS ACCURATE, because the equipment and set-up of courses no longer makes accuracy important to them. But we've even gone beyond that, because we have redefined accuracy to be irrelevant, and because the pros have deemed it to be unfair design to ask the player to hit into a less than 65-yard wide target from the tee.
They really think they should only worry about trouble 1% of the time . . . the very statistical point at which they shouldn't worry about it anymore.
If you read those last two sentences aloud to John Low in his grave, he might come out and do something about it. And, sadly, that seems to be the best chance we've got of anybody doing anything about it.