Peter,
Good comments in that last post. I've only played a few match-play events in my golfing life, but always seemed to have the most fun in that format.
At the pro level, its interesting because the players claim to loathe match play and prefer stroke play, due to the 1 and done nature of it for half the field. I wonder if they really feel that way, or if the medal play concept has infected their minds in some sort of twisted way. Or perhaps its pressure from the sponsors/tv people who are against it and its trickled down to them, (which I can at least understand their POV of wanting to have their player get max exposure/ratings).
I've played several hundred rounds in match play competition and love it with a passion. But I think the reason I love it is also why so many excellent players hate it.
To win a nine-hole match if you can manage to win three of the first six holes, tie two and lose only one, you get to the seventh tee two up. You will win almost every time if you do that.
18 hole matches are like running a mile vs. 100 meters, but the concept is the same. Win a few holes, hang on and tie several, and you can beat almost anyone. Now, back when I was playing well enough to high single digits, I beat some younger players who were significantly better than me. In fact I did it in back-to-back City Championship matches one year.
I know it pissed both of them off. Because I put them out of the tournament and ended up in the finals, and if it had been 72-hole medal I'd have had no chance. Even in those matches, I probably had my quota of crappy holes, but losing one hole by three shots is irrelevant. As an aside, having a very good short game is demoralizing to better players. In one of those matches my opponent said to his friend, "Does he ever miss one of those?" after I hit a chip shot to about six inches.
The fact is that long, really long, stroke play competitions almost always go to the best player. It's why the USGA clung to its 36-hole playoff for the Open as long as it did.
Finally, really good players still win most matches...a few years before that I played Curt Byrum in the same tournament, and despite him throwing clubs and swearing a lot, I think he beat me 4 and 3. Getting him to the 15th was sort of a highlight of my career, however.