Do I detect some regional biases here? Do we most enjoy playing on the grasses to which we became accustomed in our youths?
I'll admit to it. Growing up in New Enland, I'm a bent grass guy, particularly on greens. I hate bermuda greens! (I appreciate, however, that bermuda strains for greens are vastly improved over the past ten to fifteen years.)
As for fairways, a good stand of zoysia is always a treat. Its best playability characterisitics are an incrdible lie and quick recovery from divots. Agronomically it seems to do well in the transition zone when cool season grasses suffer in summer heat and humidity, this summer being a perfect example. Dormant zoysia is a great surface, though divots then get to be an issue.
However, I'd like to extol the virutues of rye grass. One course I play near Cincinnati has predominantly rye fairways. They require a higher mowing height, particulairly in the summer. However, they can be very firm and fast, divots will regrow if replaced, and divot holes filled with sand and seed grow in quickly. This summer, the faiways at this course were excellent, while bent courses all around were in real trouble.
(Certainly a tribute to the greenkeeper as well as the grass.)