This just in.
The poll on my website indicates 100% of respondents think golf would be more fun if
Jeff, it'd be a lot easier to take your arguments seriously if you didn't behave like this, man. My site has thousands of active members and several hundred thousand unique visitors per month. My poll has a little bit of weight. Not a lot, but it's a data point, and the results are the opposite of what you suggest: that the tide has turned. I'm not giving it a lot of weight, but it gets more than your sarcastic poll of 1.
10% more distance for athletic golfers....?(give it 10 years-though for 30 years we've been told there's no more to come)
Jeff, serious question: how far do you think the median and top PGA Tour players will be hitting the ball in 10 years?
We haven't been told "there's no more to come" for 30 years. Give me a break. In the last ten years we've added virtually no distance.
I applaud your area for resisting adding length.
That's very, very unusual in my experience.
I don't think that it's that unusual. I think people over-estimate how many courses are being lengthened, or how many more are being lengthened. Courses have been lengthened since they were built. Courses were being lengthened in the 1950s. The 1960s. The 1970s. The 1980s.
I played Gailes links in a Final Open qualifier and the back tees(which I never knew existed) added 5-600 yards.AND required a walk back of 40-100 yards every hole (many of the member tees required walks back as well from earlier lengthening)
That stinks, but that's also a set of tees that affect a tiny portion of the game's players. I'm not willing to change the entire game for 0.001% of golfers.
and modern courses, because they stretch to 7400 yards feel compelled to have 5 or 6 sets.
And the Longleaf Tee System says courses should have seven or eight.
I'm not saying anything I haven't already said, so this is getting old, fast. Jeff, if you and others stop quoting and responding to me, I've got little to nothing more to say on this. What we discuss here will not affect what the USGA/R&A do or don't do at all.
Erik,
I would not understimate the value of these discussions(here and elsewhere), even though we disagree.Discussions on this very board by many industry experts (and not so expert) have led to significant changes in the evaluation and rating of courses, and have at least poularised classic design trends.Many of the so called quirky ideas espoused here are now the mantra of former "signature" architects.
As course ratings have been affected, so has ensung architecture. Many GCA's have chimed in over the years and there are loads of connected industry lurkers, so I believe it is a good of place as any to discuss topics which affect the game and the architecture of courses.
And I can assure you we definitely disagree if you think a course having 7-8 tees per hole is a good idea, but that's a discussion for another thread even if related to how far the ball travels/course length.
The fact that I am not completely alone in my admittedly Quixotic quest to see scale restored by equipment rather than venue enlargement tells me some are reading/listening here and in other places, or coming to their own conclusions about the continued increases in distance.
I've been ranting the same thing for as long as I can remember and was decidely in the minority, even on this site-and especially with better players and pros.
Lately, that seems to have changed-especially with Tiger bringing it recently to the forefront.
I have no idea how many people agree with me and if I'm still in the minority, but that doesn't mean I'll be any less passionate about preserving the game from commercial factors that I believe devalue the game and could make it unsustainable in time. (if they haven't already).
New Championship Golf courses were 4500 yards in 1895.
They were 7000 yards in 1985.
They are 7500-7800 and as long as 8000 yards now.
Would 10000 yards in 2060 be stretch?
I can't tell you how many times I've heard there are no more gains to be had, then Freddy Couples gains another 3 yards (an exclusive couch workout I'm sure)and I get a nod and wink from my engineer friends at Callaway
I see a trend ....and for years, the USGA told us there was no statistical difference in the gains Tour players were making-but they were always forward-which add up.
Do you really think we've added "virtually no distance" (to better players) in the past 10 years? Simple better optimization would dispute that.