Patrick et al.:
I understand the value of having a false front on occasion, I just think they are already employed plenty often enough, and too often by some architects.
Of the holes for which Ed Oden posted pictures, the tenth at Shinnecock would be an example in my mind of using the feature too often. It's a plenty hard hole having to pitch up that hill from the bottom, without the additional feature that even some of the balls getting up on the green may wind up sixty yards back down the hill ... or that the false front makes chipping and putting from the back of the green bring the same risk into play.
Yes, I know it's a great championship course, blah blah blah. But that's not the kind of feature that works well for 98% of golf courses. A local course here had a couple of severe false fronts like that and they were a disaster -- those two holes really held back the success of the place.
Does Old Macdonald have any of them? Yes, indeed it does ... there are portions of the green on #3, #4, #5, #6, #10, #11 and #14 where the ball will back away off the green. Now that you mention it, there is probably too much of that. But the greens there are not built or grassed any differently than the approaches, so it's easy to fix with a mower if we want.