Not only age, but the way a game-sport changes over time:
I read a stat today about pro basketball, the NBA: so far this season, the average number of 3-point shots attempted per game is about 80 (almost half of all field goal attempts). Twenty years ago, that number was 14. In the early 1990s, the average number of 3 point attempts per game was 5.
From 5 three pointers per game to almost 80: what once was *an* aspect/dimension of the game has now become, gradually but before our eyes, *the* dimension of the game, ie the dominant one. That probably explains why many of us now find the pro game much less interesting to watch than we once did -- it has almost literally become 'one dimensional'.
We have many critics around here -- and a few apologists too -- of pro golf and the modern game, and of the tours and governing bodies and associations that have shaped it. But, as with the NBA and the 3-point shot, I can't see how distance having become the *dominant* aspect of the game hasn't made the game less interesting to watch than it once was.
Gambling on golf, it seems to me, has arrived just in the nick of time.
PS: a list of just a few of the greats who played before the 3 point shot / before it became such a huge part of the game:
Kareem, Magic, Bird, Russell, Havlicek, Walton, Reed, Dr J, Robertson etc etc -- they sure played a great game!