Sweep
Journeyman Pro
Good post and I don’t disagree. Except as the article I posted clearly shows, despite their lack of athleticism, those same top players from 30 years ago are now hitting it further than they did back then, despite being 30 years older and I guess being no more athletic. That is quite staggering if you accept that at the very top of the game there is little to choose between players or room for improvement.
As I say, I have no issue with distance in itself. We all like to see it and as you say, it offers up a whole raft of options around risk / reward. Personally I think the biggest aspect is the widening of the gap between the pro and amateur. The Callaway R&D guy said that if they produce a ball that gets an amateur 4 more yards the same ball gets a tour pro 10 more yards. Clearly with each and every improvement in equipment the pro is benefited more than the amateur.
I read somewhere that the degree of difficulty of a pro playing an average tour course is like male amateurs playing off the ladies tees using ladies indexes and pars on an average club track. To be fair, it sounds about right.
In this context we often look to the amateur experiencing difficulty playing iconic courses lengthened for today’s pro’s. We often forget that such pro’s can’t play an average course now.
In the 70’s we had a major champ play at my club. He scored 1 over. Just last week on the tee of a short par 4, I pointed out DJ would hit the green with a 4 iron.
Other than to demonstrate what is possible, there is little correlation between the pro and amateur game now and the gap is only going to get wider.
As I say, I have no issue with distance in itself. We all like to see it and as you say, it offers up a whole raft of options around risk / reward. Personally I think the biggest aspect is the widening of the gap between the pro and amateur. The Callaway R&D guy said that if they produce a ball that gets an amateur 4 more yards the same ball gets a tour pro 10 more yards. Clearly with each and every improvement in equipment the pro is benefited more than the amateur.
I read somewhere that the degree of difficulty of a pro playing an average tour course is like male amateurs playing off the ladies tees using ladies indexes and pars on an average club track. To be fair, it sounds about right.
In this context we often look to the amateur experiencing difficulty playing iconic courses lengthened for today’s pro’s. We often forget that such pro’s can’t play an average course now.
In the 70’s we had a major champ play at my club. He scored 1 over. Just last week on the tee of a short par 4, I pointed out DJ would hit the green with a 4 iron.
Other than to demonstrate what is possible, there is little correlation between the pro and amateur game now and the gap is only going to get wider.