I've been waiting on this news for some time, just so it will (hopefully) shut up a lot of the "scoring pace is the devil" critics who think that's what led to the downfall of league bowling.
What has led to the downfall of both sports is increased competition for a person's time from other interests, the breakdown of local economic systems, increased cost of participation, and sociological changes such as people simply becoming less social and more insulated behind computer screens. And while bowlers lost a lot of bowling centers along the way, golfers lost even more in terms of golf courses going under in 1999/2000 and 2006-2008.
It is much easier to identify the scoring pace, especially if the person doing it feels threatened by others suddenly bowling scores comparable to his/her own.
I've told this story before, but I used to live in a town where the local steel plant shut down its third shift, and when it did that, an entire 24-team league quit. That's 24 teams times five bowlers, or 120 people. You could add up everyone else I've ever known to quit bowling over the last 25 years, for whatever reason, and you wouldn't get to 120. I still can count the number of people who left because "scores are too high" on two hands and still have digits left over.
The scoring pace argument is a total red herring, and it becomes less of a reason every year, as older bowlers who were around pre-resin die off. Within the next 20 years, there won't be many people who began competitive bowling prior to resin's arrival, thus the excuse will be completely irrelevant, not that it isn't irrelevant already.
Golf's problems share a lot in common with bowling's problems, but people don't quit golf because it's too easy. I know plenty to have quit it because it's too hard; I'm still waiting to meet the first person to quit it because it was too easy. I have, however, met plenty of people opposed to six-hour rounds, $70 greens fees (plus another $25 for the cart if you don't want to walk), courses in shoddy condition for the price, etc.
If you want to bring both sports' numbers back, either work on the value side of golf and bowling for awhile, or figure out a way to spin the Wayback Machine back to where parents weren't helicoptering over their kids' travel ball schedules, the middle class wasn't economically threatened, or find a way to turn off video games. Just don't try to sell me on scoring pace being the problem, because it's not.
Jess