Interesting announcement by the USGA/RNA today on the new local model rule limiting club length to 46 inches. To be clear for those not following, this is a model rule, meaning, anyone sponsoring a tournament has the option to invoke this rule for their particular tournament, so it's not a hard rule to be applied across the board. I'm not necessarily against the rule, but not sure there aren't better ways that are much easier to implement to combat the increase in distance that players are hitting the ball, without having to resort to increasing the length of golf courses, etc...First, make missing the fairway easier as you get farther from the tee, i.e., pinch in the fairways. That has been done in many places, BUT, they need to make the miss more penal than just putting a bunker or rough. When rough is too long it can cause injury, I get that they don't want to do that, but let's plant bushes, trees, etc...Then, for bunkers, make them more difficult, I find it comical that course designers place bunkers around a green and then grow the rough to be nasty, only to have players aim for bunkers because it's a much easier shot. Take a page from Whistling straits...make them difficult and inconsistent. There is no reason that every bunker on the course has to be identical in feel (depth of stand, type of sand, etc..). These two recommendations alone cost almost nothing...thoughts?