My opinion on this is that one shot does not make a hole.
In Doug's example, if a ball is essentially not able to stay on a green under any circumstances...no good.
Taking the idea that a good iron shot should always end up on the green can only do one thing, and I think Redanman laid it out quite well...boring golf.
Jim-
Maybe I'm not hitting the right shot to that green; I don't know. I'm an 11-marker. I don't have a problem with hitting the green and the ball releasing off; the only thing I wish for is sometimes a chance to save par. My problem with the green complex really lies with the red stakes/hazards so close to the green.
In contrast, when I played your course, if I missed a green, I almost always had a shot at saving par or getting out with a bogey; it wasn't like on 6 at Led where "the ball kicked somewhere in this retention basin to the left" or "this ball is under this shrubbery to the right", and I'm looking at 6 at best, and 7 more likely than not.
I do rethink my strategy on that hole all the time; I may try laying up closer to the mounding and just try a simple 30 yard pitch shot next time.
That's sort of the general overall 'quirk' I have found to Lederach, which may lie more with the maintenance end than the design end, is that areas which may be expected to be soft in fact are firm, and areas expected to be firm are soft.
For example, I have found #2 is often best approached by bouncing a ball in, despite the fact that the second shot is made to a slightly elevated green, maybe knock down a PW or 9i 10 yards short and let it run up, especially to front and center-right hole locations.
What do you think?