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Kevin Kisner criticized the planned golf ball rollback, calling it potentially 'one of the dumbest things ever.' The USGA and The R&A aim to implement this change in professional golf by 2028 and for amateurs by 2030.
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Kevin Kisner has issued a strong verdict on the planned golf ball rollback, insisting that one aspect could represent the dumbest decision possible.
With everything going on with LIV Golf right now, you would be forgiven for forgetting that the game is edging closer and closer to a significant change from 2028.
That is the year when the USGA and The R&A plan to outlaw the current golf ball in the professional game. Meanwhile, similar rules are set to come into the amateur game from 2030.
The new golf ball is set to not travel quite as far. It appears to be a move to combat how professional players are seemingly hitting the ball further and further.
There is definitely a case to be made for making the changes. It is obviously better for the environment if golf courses take up less land.
Meanwhile, it does appear that the longer golf courses on the PGA Tour are often the least interesting. It is not exciting for the viewer when distance is the main defence.
However, not everyone is a fan of the changes. Speaking on the We Need A Fourth podcast, Kevin Kisner claimed that he cannot understand the move.
āI hope it doesnāt happen. I think itās one of the dumbest things ever,ā he said.
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āThe coolest part about golf is I can go play with you three and we can walk in the pro shop and use the exact same driver and the exact same golf ball, and you three will go āwowā when I hit it compared to when you hit it. Iām not even one of the long ones. Whatās going to be cool about me coming to play with you three and you three hit it the same distance as me or even past me because Iām having to play a different golf ball than you?
āWe donāt do it in any other sport. If I want to go play football, I can play the same football that Arch Manning throws. If I go play basketball, I can go play the same basketball at the same height that LeBron James throws. Every sport has gotten better, athletically, physically, so has golf.
āWeāre having to change a golf ball because people are scared to move a tee back 10 yards. Itās just not worth it in my opinion. Plus the millions and millions and millions of dollars itās going to cost the industry from all these manufacturers having to go back to the drawing board and try to figure out how to make the best golf ball possible with new restrictions on it just for pros. No amateur is going to want to play anymore. Why would you suck more on purpose? I donāt know anybody that would.ā
Any change that encourages golf course designers to think outside the box is a good thing. It gets very tedious watching the majority of PGA Tour players make a relatively comfortable four on a 500-yard par four several times a week.
Doral failed to capture the imagination this past week at the Cadillac Championship. The golf course was longer than it was when it was last on the PGA Tour calendar back in 2016. And yet, Cameron Young was able to reach 19 under par.
Extending golf courses is clearly not the answer.
But reducing how far the golf ball travels is surely not the solution either. As Kisner notes, amateur golfers are unlikely to benefit in any way.
Instead, the focus should surely be on building golf courses that ask an even greater variety of questions of players and do not just rely on their distance.
Kevin Kisner believes the golf ball rollback is potentially 'one of the dumbest things ever.'
The golf ball rollback is set to take effect for professionals in 2028 and for amateurs in 2030.
The USGA and The R&A are the organizations planning to implement the golf ball rollback.
The rollback is being considered as a significant change to the game of golf, amid ongoing discussions about the sport's future.

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