"It is probably a time thing. People have busier lives and there is less time to find five or six hours in your day.
"It should be going well - we have Lydia [Ko] at the top and Danny [Lee] is going well as well. It should be going really well but unfortunately I can't really see it."
Golf has often been criticized for not being inclusive enough - adhering rigorously in some cases to strict and even archaic protocols. Smail acknowledges that the sport here is making small progress in becoming a more open sport.
"I think they are trying to take steps that way," Smail says. "I know there are quite a few clubs that are relaxed about dress codes and stuff like that to try and get more people into golf and not feeling like it is that posh sport and that you have to do the right things and be in the right jobs and that sort of stuff.
"Somehow we need to find more people to play the game."
With Lydia Ko the number one player in the women's game and Danny Lee showing good form on the PGA Tour Smail believes the sport domestically should be thriving but he points to one major issue that is thwarting the success of the leading elite players rubbing off on the local game.
"Probably one thing that is bad is losing all the golf coverage [on television]. We only get the majors now and a lot of my mates are pretty upset about it. You can see why. I am not a huge golf watcher myself but I can see how not having the golf on every weekend is pretty hard."
Smail, who has spent a number of years playing professionally on the Japanese Tour is back in New Zealand this week competing at the Akarana Open in Auckland - an event on the Charles Tour. He says coming back home after so much time abroad makes it easy to see the stark contrast to the rest of the world, where the numbers of people playing are skyrocketing.
"I spend so much time away and you see the different programs all over the world and people really excited about playing golf but you just have the feeling here that it isn't happening. I don't know how to change it."