Driving Distance Way Up...Let's Anticipate The Spin!

E. Michael Johnson notes in Golf World Monday (link should work even for non-subscribers) that the tour average through the Wells Fargo Championship is at "286 yards, an increase of 4.6 yards over the same period last year and an average increase of 3.25 yards over the same period for the prior four seasons. This is notable because distance has essentially been flat the past six years."
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"The members decided an auction was the quickest and easiest solution for the club that’s been around roughly a half century."

Thanks to Del for Dawn Wotapka's Wall Street Journal blog item on the May 10 auction of Oak Lane Country Club in Woodbridge, Conn., which the item says is "the latest sign of trouble in the golf-club industry."

With the reserve price set at $1.6 million, the club’s sale price starts at a song. But bidding could be intense. With large tracts of residentially zoned land rare in the crowded Northeast, everyone from developers to church congregations have shown interest, says Oren Klein, partner and auctioneer for Tranzon Integrated Property Group.

The buyer might not be a golf course operator: Players continue to abandon golf – a single game can take several hours – in favor of quicker, easier and more affordable activities. Fewer club members equals lower revenue.

The things you learn from the WSJ!

At one point, Oak Lane club had several hundred members, but that has fallen to around 200, which didn’t generate enough money to pay the bills, according to Mr. Klein. Plus, several nearby courses pose stiff competition for everything from green fees to catering orders.

“The numbers don’t work anymore,” he says. “They’re in default with their mortgage.”

The members decided an auction was the quickest and easiest solution for the club that’s been around roughly a half century.

Phil Buys An Arizona Course And Other Notes About The State Of AZ Country Clubdom

Thanks to reader John for Peter Corbett's look at the state of golf clubs in Scottsdale and he reports a lot of membership and dues numbers, very little of it encouraging for developers but great for golfers. He also reveals this recent course purchase:

"This is about the low-water mark I've ever seen," he said.

Scottsdale's Sanctuary Golf Course was sold in the past month to Phil Mickelson and his agent, Steve Loy, for $2.2 million, a price far below its value of five years ago, Garrett said.

Brad Klein, a GolfWeek magazine editor, said the problem at Phoenix and Scottsdale golf clubs is that real-estate development subsidizes the golf operations.

When members take over the golf cub from the real-estate developer, they are forced to cut operating costs or tax themselves to maintain the courses at a high level, he said.

"There is a statement in the industry that the third owner makes the money," Klein said.

The third owner buys a course for $4 million that costs $20 million to build and $4 million to operate annually, he said.

If Deane Beman Was Commissioner (Again) For A Day: Equipment Regulation!**

Thanks to reader Ken for sharing the sequence from today's Morning Drive where Deane Beman and Adam Schupak were plugging their new (and of the many parts I've read, excellent) book. Co-host Tony Erik Kuselias asked:

"Tomorrow you get to be commissioner again and you are complete czar and you can do whatever you want and everybody will agree, what's the ONE thing you'd like to see get done that has not been done right now."

Beman's reply?

"My greatest regret is that I was not able to influence the direction of technology in golf. I think it has had a dramatic effect on how the game is played, on the cost of golf being played today. There's m-billions (Couldn't tell if it was M or B) of dollars that have been put into golf courses to try to accomodate the best players in the world. and it's not just tour courses, it's every course around the country. Just in case Tiger Woods happens to come and play your course and you don't want him to shoot 60.
 
"Everybody has increased the speed of their greens to levels that the average player can't handle. The cost of maintenance of golf courses has risen, therefore the cost of memberships, the cost of green fees have gone up. All to, in my opinion, the detriment of golf."

At this point co-host Gary Williams saw his rally kill light go on and jumped in to protect the best interests of baseball by asking him about appearance fees!

St. Andrews Golf Club To Admit Women

The Guardian's Severin Carrell reports on the big change for St. Andrews. Naturally, despite the story describing the St. Andrews clubhouse, they ran a photo of...you guessed it...the R&A clubhouse, which is definitely not the St. Andrews Golf Club.

The committee at the St Andrews Golf Club, which is run from a handsome Victorian mansion overlooking the greens and fairways of the fabled Old Course, has written to its 2,000 male members recommending that it admit women to the club. The club, founded in 1843, has warned its members that under the new Equality Act, the club could face prosecution for failing to allow women to join. Keeping the ban would be a "retrograde step" as it would mean women would also have to be barred from its clubhouse as guests.

Its past club captains and trustees had decided that allowing all members, regardless of their gender, to have full access to all its bars and facilities would be "the best way, in their opinion, of safeguarding the long-term wellbeing of St Andrews Golf Club", the members were told.

Down boy, down boy. Contain your enthusiam!

"Nearly every private club in the Miami Valley has special offers. All it takes is a telephone call to learn what’s available."

Thanks to reader Larry for Jim Harper's Biscayne Times story on "The Trouble With Golf" that details the woes of south Florida courses. It's a long read but it's worth noting because Harper looks at all sides and talks to people on the ground. Much of the talk about golf in Florida these days stems from the recent bill introduced to convert at least five state parks into Nicklaus-designed courses.
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"Why, one wonders, is there any need to lengthen a course the world's best found more than challenging at a time when the technological issue is apparently done and dusted?"

John Huggan looks at R&A Secretary Peter Dawson's various contradictory statements and actions on the distance issue in an excellent reminder of where the governing bodies say the game is and where we actually stand. The List also gets a mention!

"Driving distance is not increasing and we take that very much into account in course set-up and course alterations," said Dawson. "We do think we have this issue (distance) surrounded."

At first glance, Dawson is right. A quick look at driving distance statistics shows that, in 2005, the longest driver on America's PGA Tour was Australian Scott Hend with an average knock of 318.9 yards. Last year, Robert Garrigus of the US was longest, on 315.5 yards. Hang on though. A closer inspection of the numbers is less reassuring. If we go back to 2002 (when former Open champion John Daly was the biggest hitter on 306.8 yards) only one player, Daly, averaged over 300 yards from the tee and a mere 18 averaged over 290 yards. Three years later, 26 players were routinely over 300 yards and 86 averaged 290 yards or more. And last year, Garrigus was one of a dozen over 300 yards, with 73 averaging more than 290 (the slight drop can be attributed to course set-up "tricks" such as mowing the fairway grass towards the tee rather than the green).

"They just have zero fear, which is perhaps the greatest difference between the kiddie corps of today and those of the previous era."

Steve Elling mines a topic that has been severely undertouched by the golf media: why are there so many more talented and mature young players than ever before? Lots of interesting food for thought, though the role of technology is not delved into. Still, I found this part with David Leadbetter reminding us of those who didn't make it just as interesting:
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"Architecture has been abysmal in my opinion in its reaction to equipment and technology and bigger, stronger golfers."

As someone who has studied the evolution of the golf ball distance debate in recent years, it's fun to see how far we've come. There was the initial shock of the whole distance explosion which led to irrational claims of improved player athleticism as the sole cause. Then we moved to years of attempts to dispute that anything was amiss even as courses like Augusta resorted to planting Christmas trees. 
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Fourth Masters Question: Time To Revisit Long Putters and Bracing The Putter?

Adam Scott almost won the Masters with a long putter, something we all know has not happened in a major championship player by male flatbellies. Obviously, the Golf Gods intervened, because how else to explain a victory by the right-handed, harmless-animal-killing Mike Weir look-alike contest winner to cap off an otherwise fantastic week of golf.
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