I must apologize for associating Braid with Saunton. It is chronic habit as I found that I asked Tom MacWood to clarify a Braid/Saunton association on a thread years ago.
I do not apologize for asking Ryan to back up his generalized statements with specifics. I belong to a Fazio course and I enjoy some of his work but I deplore his arrogance. I really haven't played enough of his courses to comment regarding his body of work. But I submit it is a different ability that allows Mr Fazio to demand and receive comparatively unlimited dollars to recast an entire landscape to fit his talented eye as compared to James Braid making something out of whatever he is given with very few dollars.
As for pious I reserve that demeanor for a higher authority than a gca and it is a preferable attitude to flippant unsupported criticism in any case. But really I think Ryan is criticizing those on this site who do reserve a reverence for those designers who respect the land and work with what they have rather than Braid so much.
In any case the thread has revealed that Braid has a diverse body of work for very good reasons and that has pretty much superceded whether Braid's lesser body of work drags him down from the accomplished level.
To summarise, you piped in with descriptions of carelessness, and negligence and then embarrassed yourself by crediting Braid with Saunton. You've played virtually no Braid courses, including the one in question. Yet you loftily wheel out platitudes about 'respecting the land.'
On the sheer volume of courses he's credited with in a four or five year span, he would've barely seen the land let alone 'respected it'. Remove all the phoney nostalgia and reverence and judged on the courses, he did some great, many very good, but a huge number you wouldn't cross the road to play. But, hey, why let this get in the way of saying what you think everyone wants to hear.
The old guys worked with what they had. It's one of these silly statements like 'taking one shot at a time'. No shit. If Braid had budget and machinery, you can bet he would have spent it rather than dashing to do a new course every fortnight. Similarly if Fazio was on site for only two days, he'd post them his routing a month later and leave them to get on with it.
As for Perranporth, I found to be a horrible experience in the wind. A good links course is enhanced by wind, Perranporth, I found miserable and offered very little in terns of achievable shots/routes. I found that it was impossible to bounce the ball in and it made pro, decent amateur and hacker all hopeless equals. It asks too many questions to which there is no answer and removes skill or even any hope of luck. Fun if you like crazy, I suppose.
May be a perverse view to you, albeit you've never played it, but I assure you it very much divides opinion in this part of the world.