Michigan Golf Journal March 2021

The USGA and the R & A, golf’s rule-making bodies, are not waiting nervously for my opinion on the distance debate surrounding the game. But here it goes in brief: something needs to be done at the elite golfer level to roll back distance in order to maintain the traditional dimensions of the game. We can’t continue to lengthen Augusta National and other iconic venues to resist a very small number of players and their ever-rising average driving distance. The PGA Tour’s average driving distance has risen to 296.4 yards, a 15% increase over the past 20 years. Meanwhile, the average driving distance for recreational golfers has decreased one yard since 2005 to 216 yards. To me, this means having one set of equipment rules for elite tournament players—amateur and professional alike— and another for recreational players. Although the word is an anathema to some traditionalists, I can live with a “bifurcation” of the rules. Several major sports have done a better and smarter job of regulating the effects of technology. Look at Major League Baseball (MLB). It has long banned the use of aluminum bats in the game, knowing the increased velocity imparted by such bats would be ruinous to current ballpark dimensions. And recently, MLB took steps to deaden its official ball in order to combat the surge in home runs. Hmmm, sure seems like reasonable measures to harness the effects of “distance” in the game. Another example is tennis. In 2002, the Tennis Federation adopted a new tournament ball to help slow down the serve game on hard courts while speeding up the game on slower surfaces such as clay. The slightly larger ball came off the racquet at the same speed as a standard tennis ball but it slowed down during flight to give the receiver about 10 percent more reaction time. The result Michigan Golf Journal The Distance Debate Golf Distance Rules Can Learn From Other Sports Guest Opinion By Terry Moore

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTQ2Nzk4