I think Andy is making some very good points here that I would like to 2nd.
1) I too would much rather have a "lesser" angle to the hole with a fairway lie over any other angle in a poor lie like rough, trees, nasty bunkers, etc. And just because an angle is lesser does not make it bad....its like having a pasta dinner or steak dinner, neither is bad but most would clearly have a preference of one over another.
2) These courses do have a lot of width, and the reality is they do make it easier for everyone...but there is nothing wrong with that. For a high capper like me, wider fairways will mean less recovery shots, which will mean better scores. When i played Ballyneal, I had one of my best rounds in the last couple of years. Does that mean I think the course is a pushover? Certainly not, but no doubt the course was a lot of fun because it was playable for someone like me who is inconsistent with my shot making.
3) As much as we are in denial on GCA.com, for great players, most angles really just don't matter because when they have wedge in thier hand their can fire at any pin they want to regardless of where they are. We see these guys do it on brutally tough course setups week in and out. Its not a bad thing, its just that these guys have insanely good golf skills and the course or its membership shouldn't take it personal because the course still plays plenty challenging for everyone else.
Furthermore most players aren't trying to make birdie on every hole. Given that the average handicap of players is somewhere in the mid to high teens, most golfers are usually just trying to make a par, and are usually pleased with it. Sure we have some good players here on GCA.com, but the average joe on the course is closer to my skill set, where pars are usually the goal with the occasional short 4 or 5 where one is thinking birdie.