I think there's an underlying question of whether one thinks being on the putting surface should be accorded special status in terms of what's reasonable to expect as an outcome.
I have encountered players who honestly feel that if you "miss the green" by even a foot and there's no realistic chance of getting down in two from there, well then you should have hit the green. And they also feel that if you're somewhere on the green, even if it is in the wrongest of wrong parts of the green, then you ought to be able to lag the ball up near the hole with a good long putt and if you can't then the green is "unplayable".
There is certainly a way of thinking among golfers, encouraged IMO by some of the comments you hear broadcasters and Tour players utter on television, that certain things should carry a payoff or guarantee. Hitting a fairway should mean being in better than position than missing a fairway, no matter what the actual position relative to the rest of the hole. Being on the green should be better than being off the green, even if the difference is a couple of feet one way or another.
All of that sounds terribly wrong-headed to most of us high-minded traditionalists, right? Yet on the other hand there was a thread on this forum a couple weeks ago about how terrible it was that bunkers are maintained so nicely that often being in a bunker is preferable to being in the rough. After all, bunkers are supposed to be hazards so it should not be simple to hit a good shot out of them, right?
Lots of people have their prejudices. Most of them, whether they use the word or not, concern fair results from certain predefined categories of events on the golf course. Where what is fair seems to vary from person to person.