Brad Klein,
There is no doubt that the article is a "how to" article.
I liken it to a "how to" article instructing the readers on how to build a bomb. No good can come out of it.
By appearing on the coverpage of the USGA website, it conveys the wrong message to the golf world.
Eliminating or reducing contours and slopes also has a dramatic effect on the approach and recovery shots, and the strategy of the hole.
It certainly can't be good for those aspects of the game.
Jim Kennedy,
I don't understand what you're saying.
You don't want to impact the internal contouring, but you want to soften the general slope ??
That would seem to call for a total rebuilding of the green.
One of the features that makes GCGC so good, and allows it to resist scoring is the slope of their greens.
There is very little in the way of internal contouring at GCGC, but almost every green has pitch to it.
Eliminating that pitch would quickly take the heart and soul out of the golf course.
TEPaul,
I don't know if PV has increased the speed of their greens over the last 20 years, kept them the same, or reduced them.
My guess would be that they are consistently faster.
I've always had a theory with respect to those that supe up their greens, both in advocacy and practice.
Let them supe them up, then let me place their ball on each of the 18 greens at varying lengths, and for every putt over 36, they pay me $5,000, and for every putt under 36, I pay them $ 5,000, and we'll see how much resolve is in their super fast greens advocacy.
I have always liked fast greens, but, when great players are putting off of greens half way down a fairway, something is desperately wrong, and the answer isn't to reslope the green, it's to cut back on the speed, and ignore improved scores.
If it was Humpty Dumpty Links that had softened their slopes instead of PV, I suspect your perspective would be altered.
Rather then address your hypothetical situation, which is fruitless, let's substitute the 1st green at NGLA with your imaginary green.
Let me then say, that I would oppose any elimination or reduction in slope and/or contour.
And, that the solution is for the superintendent to find a speed within the tolerance of the design and the membership's ability to navigate the greens.
Once you advocate eliminating or reducing the slopes of greens, you're no different from all of those others before you that disfigured their classic golf courses in the name of their pet cause.