Jim,
I haven't played the course, so it may not be fair to comment, but in general, most of the people I know who have played the courses prefer the gentler CC greens. I told one golf writer, he could use my line of "Doak greens treat me like a baby treats a diaper" but he declined......
I am not a big fan of the severity of TD's greens (okay, so how's that for not chilling the discussion?) But in an overall sense, here is my take why:
The TOC argument is wrong in this case. Besides the green speeds, golf design has evolved. It is possible that over 400 years and thousands of golf courses, that the function of a green has evolved, and design thinking has evolved, too. On another thread, it is asked what is the function of a green, and most think its twofold - accept a shot, and allow a reasonable chance at 2 putts. Some here don't like the concept of par, and I understand it, but the world apparently doesn't. They expect a reasonable 2 putt.
In shorter terms - 1. They are too tough for most golfers. Who should we design courses for? 2. Most golfers don't really like them. Should we design for current tastes of the majority in most cases? 3. They are harder to maintain. Maybe even to sustain, a buzz word today.
While we may celebrate the 1% or so of world courses that have Oakmont or Augusta type greens, we have to ask just how many more of them we need to build? I find myself asking, if every other architect who built severe greens has had them softened, how long will it be until there is a movement to soften TD's greens?
Again, just trying to provide the other side of the spectrum, in the spirit on non chilled discussion about TD work.