Winston Churchill would have been impressed.
The late British prime minister delivered one of the most famous quotations in golf when he described it as "a game whose aim is to hit a very small ball into an even smaller hole with weapons singularly ill-designed for the purpose."
Equipment is a lot better. And if the elite players are not more skilled, there at least are more of them. They put on quite a show this year, offering enough evidence to pick out the most significant shots of the year struck with every club in the bag.
DRIVER: Bubba Watson had a two-shot lead in the final round of the Masters when he hit driver on par-5 13th. He played a little more of a cut than he intended, and it soared down the left side of the fairways and over the trees. It finally reappeared in the fairway, so far that Watson had only a sand wedge for his second shot. "When you hear a roar on a tee shot, you know you've done good," he said.
3-WOOD: Mo Martin hit 3-wood from 240 yards on the par-5 18th hole at Royal Birkdale. She thought at first it might be short, and then it might be long. When she heard the ball clang off the flagstick, she knew it was just right. The ball settled about 6 feet away, and Martin made the eagle putt that turned out to be a winner in the Women's British Open.
5-WOOD: Rory McIlroy was trailing by one shot on the final hole in the Honda Classic when he hit 5-wood from 245 yards to a peninsula green at PGA National. The ball plopped down 12 feet away, giving McIlroy an eagle putt for the win. He missed the putt to join a four-man playoff won by Russell Henley. The shot was no less magnificent.
3-IRON: Jason Day was 3 up in the final of the Match Play Championship and looked as though he had given away the par-5 11th hole by driving into the desert and having to chip back to the fairway. His 3-iron bounced onto the green and grazed the edge of the cup, settling 5 feet away for a birdie to halve the hole.
4-IRON: In a free-for-all at Torrey Pines, Scott Stallings had 222 yards to the green on par-5 18th when his caddie said to him, "Let's see what you've got." Stallings hit a 4-iron that narrowly cleared the water and set up a two-putt birdie for a one-shot victory.