But Tim: you and Erik keep referencing 'the last 10 years', as if that's the key point in the argument. But is it, really? (I mean, what's special about the last 10 years as opposed to, say, the last 20?) And even if I grant you the point, the implication/subtext seems to be that there's no use in a roll-back *now*, since distance gains at the highest levels have tapered off. Maybe they have - though clearly not before an almost 8,000 yard course was designed and built and hosted a US Open, and not before TW designed and built a 7500+ yard private course solely for members play. Which is to say: the dramatic distance gains over the last 20 years (perhaps, I'd guess, equal to or greater than all the gains achieved in the 50-60 years before that combined) have already impacted/influenced both the professional and amateur games, and will continue to do so. So the key point, it seems to me, is this: do we all accept this as the new normal (especially for golfers your age and younger)? Or do we instead listen to golfer-architects like Tiger and Jack when they say that the distance the pros are currently hitting it is (negatively) influencing all levels of the game by fostering the design/re-design of golf courses that are too long and too expensive to maintain and that require too much time to walk/play and too many inputs?
Peter
PS - just noticed that, as usual, Jim can say in one line what I did in 10!