David,
Its interesting though how sometimes score matters and sometimes it does not. Speaking from personal experience, I don't even keep a scorecard most of the time so I can easily make the argument that score matters not. However, at the same time whenever I complain that a course is too difficult or unreasonable or whatever, thats a tough statement to make when one shoots a good score
At the same time, I really believe that some courses ARE too difficult whether it be for me, the average golfer, etc. So even for those of us that don't keep a score, the way we play the course and interact with the features of it HAS to make some difference. The ability to block that out to a point and be reasonable about it is key.
Regarding the fellow at Kingsley, his argument was that the course has too many
severe slopes feeding the ball away from the green. The more he mentioned specific situations the more I could see his argument, even if his complaint wasn't something that bothers me. Thinking of the front nine, there are spots on #2, 3, 6, 7, 8, and 9 where the ball can get repelled away from the green. One important point from his perspective was not that balls went away from the green, but the severity of how they did so. The only hole that bothered me was short right of #2, and Mike DeVries has altered the way that plays a bit since I've been there. Its part of the playability argument that we have on here occasionally--for some golfers those kinds of slopes are just as frustrating as lost balls.