Bring the Real Game of Golf Back
I freely admit to being a fanatic about playing the great game of golf as well as being a lifelong fan of the professional game.
I first started following the pro circuit when Arnold Palmer broke on the scene like a swashbuckling D'Artagnan.
I quickly fell in love with the nearly poetic beauty of the game and became fascinated by Palmer's bold adventures.
From today's perspective, we look back on those days, the days of television's early feeble attempts at covering a game played over many acres, and realize that what were then called 'fast' greens were, in reality, excruciatingly slow and bumpy.
And that course conditions were, for the most part, ragged.
Observe some of the replays of All Star Golf and the early Shell's Wonderful World of Golf on the Golf Channel and you'll see what I mean.
It only makes all the more remarkable the achievements of the greats of those days and the days long before them.
How, for example, under those conditions, was Byron Nelson able to set an incredible scoring average that stood for decades until Tiger Woods (who else) broke it in 2000.
But the record was broken on courses manicured to a degree that Nelson could only have dreamed of during his prime.
All of which brings us to the current day and what is happening to this great game.
True, today's players are bigger, stronger and better conditioned than any who have gone before.
And true, their talent level as a whole is greater - after all, they've had amazing role models from whom to learn.
They've also had the benefit of an unprecedented amount of research and electronic analysis that didn't exist in their predecessor's time.
It is normal and even beneficial that the overall talent level and general proficiency improves and that cherished records fall on a fairly regular basis as Father Time marches on.
But what we've seen over the past ten to twenty years is too much.
Players now on the Champion's Tour are hitting the ball farther than they ever did while in their prime on the regular tour.
The average driving distance on the regular tour is increasing geometrically.
Architects are being forced to stretch classic courses to inconceivable lengths: courses routinely now measure an incredible 7,500 yards - and, I believe, the overall health of the game is suffering.
It is in some ways similar to what's happened to basketball over the years.
Once an intriguing game of finesse, it has become nothing more than a group of extremely tall people dashing madly up and down the court and stuffing the ball ferociously into the basket.
What were once fouls are ignored - traveling and palming the ball are now routine.
Just about anything goes in today's world of Full Contact Basketball.
Gone is the intricate teamwork that once made the game a joy.
Golf is in danger of undergoing the same type of deterioration.
With the incredible advances in club and ball technology that have largely gone unchecked by the USGA and R&A, great courses are becoming obsolete, records are becoming fodder for the shredder and the game's finesse, except in the case of a few modern players such as Woods and Michelson, is disappearing at an alarming rate.
It is becoming a 'slam it hard and find it' game.
When was the last time you saw a pro gently cut a long iron - and I'm talking a 1 or 2 iron - into the target? Today's ball is harder to curve and fewer and fewer pros master the art of working the ball.
I liked Jack Nicklaus' idea of some years ago - his suggestion of a 'standard ball', if you will.
Strictly regulate the distance the ball can go under normal circumstances to retain the integrity of our great courses.
Let's make talent the determining factor, not who happens to grab the latest hot technology.
A great story is told of Sam Snead playing Pinehurst #2.
When he was in his prime, he used a 1 iron on one of the longer par 3s on the course.
Many years later, playing on the Senior Tour, he used a 3 iron.
He was well into his 50s at the time.
That classic picture of Ben Hogan at Merion in 1950 hitting a 1 iron into the 18th green is another example.
Years later, I attended the Open there and stood at exactly the same spot watching Jack Nicklaus use a 5 iron.
We need to bring the game under control.
The great players will still be the great players - Tiger Woods would have been a force of nature in days past, just as he is today - but the big winners would be the classic courses like Merion, which has no more room to expand to accommodate today's super boomers; the environment, since less area would be needed and less maintenance required; and the history and integrity of the game.
Copyright 2008 Jim Nettleton
I first started following the pro circuit when Arnold Palmer broke on the scene like a swashbuckling D'Artagnan.
I quickly fell in love with the nearly poetic beauty of the game and became fascinated by Palmer's bold adventures.
From today's perspective, we look back on those days, the days of television's early feeble attempts at covering a game played over many acres, and realize that what were then called 'fast' greens were, in reality, excruciatingly slow and bumpy.
And that course conditions were, for the most part, ragged.
Observe some of the replays of All Star Golf and the early Shell's Wonderful World of Golf on the Golf Channel and you'll see what I mean.
It only makes all the more remarkable the achievements of the greats of those days and the days long before them.
How, for example, under those conditions, was Byron Nelson able to set an incredible scoring average that stood for decades until Tiger Woods (who else) broke it in 2000.
But the record was broken on courses manicured to a degree that Nelson could only have dreamed of during his prime.
All of which brings us to the current day and what is happening to this great game.
True, today's players are bigger, stronger and better conditioned than any who have gone before.
And true, their talent level as a whole is greater - after all, they've had amazing role models from whom to learn.
They've also had the benefit of an unprecedented amount of research and electronic analysis that didn't exist in their predecessor's time.
It is normal and even beneficial that the overall talent level and general proficiency improves and that cherished records fall on a fairly regular basis as Father Time marches on.
But what we've seen over the past ten to twenty years is too much.
Players now on the Champion's Tour are hitting the ball farther than they ever did while in their prime on the regular tour.
The average driving distance on the regular tour is increasing geometrically.
Architects are being forced to stretch classic courses to inconceivable lengths: courses routinely now measure an incredible 7,500 yards - and, I believe, the overall health of the game is suffering.
It is in some ways similar to what's happened to basketball over the years.
Once an intriguing game of finesse, it has become nothing more than a group of extremely tall people dashing madly up and down the court and stuffing the ball ferociously into the basket.
What were once fouls are ignored - traveling and palming the ball are now routine.
Just about anything goes in today's world of Full Contact Basketball.
Gone is the intricate teamwork that once made the game a joy.
Golf is in danger of undergoing the same type of deterioration.
With the incredible advances in club and ball technology that have largely gone unchecked by the USGA and R&A, great courses are becoming obsolete, records are becoming fodder for the shredder and the game's finesse, except in the case of a few modern players such as Woods and Michelson, is disappearing at an alarming rate.
It is becoming a 'slam it hard and find it' game.
When was the last time you saw a pro gently cut a long iron - and I'm talking a 1 or 2 iron - into the target? Today's ball is harder to curve and fewer and fewer pros master the art of working the ball.
I liked Jack Nicklaus' idea of some years ago - his suggestion of a 'standard ball', if you will.
Strictly regulate the distance the ball can go under normal circumstances to retain the integrity of our great courses.
Let's make talent the determining factor, not who happens to grab the latest hot technology.
A great story is told of Sam Snead playing Pinehurst #2.
When he was in his prime, he used a 1 iron on one of the longer par 3s on the course.
Many years later, playing on the Senior Tour, he used a 3 iron.
He was well into his 50s at the time.
That classic picture of Ben Hogan at Merion in 1950 hitting a 1 iron into the 18th green is another example.
Years later, I attended the Open there and stood at exactly the same spot watching Jack Nicklaus use a 5 iron.
We need to bring the game under control.
The great players will still be the great players - Tiger Woods would have been a force of nature in days past, just as he is today - but the big winners would be the classic courses like Merion, which has no more room to expand to accommodate today's super boomers; the environment, since less area would be needed and less maintenance required; and the history and integrity of the game.
Copyright 2008 Jim Nettleton
Source...