Was reading one of my lesser-known books today . . . THE BOOK OF THE LINKS, 2nd edition 1950 . . . and stumbled across this passage from the Introduction, by Bernard Darwin:
"We so often see a committee torturing itself to get their course, as they think, more worthy of distinguished visitors, only to find those visitors, at any rate in summer-time, getting home with a drive and a pitch as easily and contemptuously as ever. The policy of stretching holes and courses to their utmost has gone as far as it can without having really achieved its end. If the fact of there being less money to spend on green keeping now puts a check on it, so much, to my mind, the better."