I recently played Saratoga Lake here in the Albany area, and the width of the fairways was laughable. This course is cut out of a woodland, and on many holes, the fairway takes up less than half of the playing corridor. This is a public course, no less, and I was spending a decent amount of time looking for relatively well hit drives.
I also recently played the Edison Clun, also in the Albany area, and it too had narrow fairways in wide playing corridors. The number 1 handicap on the front nine was notable for the narrow fairway running straight to the tree across a landing area that canted downhill, right to left. The reward for a well struck ball, it kicks left into rough? I don't think Emmet was thinking that's the way the hole should play.
So, yes, it's a bad model to take home. Unfortunately, what happens at the US Open doesn't stay at the US Open.