wireme
Masterpiece
I was wandering through an area in the wild this spring that was heavily affected by tip blight. I noticed that the infected trees had mostly reverted to juvenile foliage. Maybe it's a defence mechanism against the infection and juvenile foliage is more resistant? It may also me simply that the new foliage is emerging from adventitious growth after the main branches die back. In either case keep your tree healthy and growing strong and it will eventually revert back. I would even consider pruning hard when your confident the tree can take it knowing that it will result in juvenile foliage but also knowing it will revert back in time. In the end it might be quicker than pruning slowly and trying to avoid it.