I recall reading last week (I think it was Geoff Ogilvy's notes on how to play Augusta that The Fried Egg posted) about how hard it is to play bump-and-run shots at Augusta because the bounces into the green are slow due to the grain, but the greens themselves are lightning fast. That made sense to me, at least for a pro playing in a major. Then again, I can think of at least five pitch shots, just off the top of my head, that bounced before hitting the green this week. On purpose. This side of an Open, I don't know how many pro tournaments that would be true for in 2021.
I just don't think the ground game is going to ever be a pro's favored option from inside 200 yards. And I think that's ok. Elite-level golf requires removing some of the randomness that the ground introduces. I like that Augusta still dictates a bounce-up on occasion, but mostly, I like that it seems like a course where a recreational player visiting for the day can get perfectly decent results playing a ground-bound game while a group of major champions a few groups behind him can still feel fully challenged.