This made me think:
For as long as golf has been played, any one stroke has always been worth one stroke. That is, whether it was a hundred years ago or just last week, a 200 yard drive counted as 1 stroke, and a 150 yard approach counted as 1 stroke, and so did a 10 foot putt, or even a tap in.
One of the traditional -- and unique -- features of the game (and one that was traditionally supported by and reflected in the architecture of its fields of play) is that brute strength (in the form of a massively long drive) was "valued" (in terms of a golfer's scores) no more or no less than finesse (in the form of holing a curling 8 foot putt). That's always been important facet of the ethos of golf: young or old, strong or savvy, golfers of all types could find their way to a good score specifically because of how this score was measured.
This has been true, as mentioned, since the game began; and yet, something has changed over the decades. Yes, the long drive is now still 'counted' just the same as an 8 foot putt; and yet, in many ways the 'value' of those two kinds of strokes has, over the years, been increasingly 'weighted' more and more towards the former and away from the latter. Courses have been getting longer for decades while at the same time greens have been getting flatter/less contoured -- the long drive valued ever more, and touch on and around the greens ever less.
Looking back, the 16th at NB reflects a time in golf/in the game's ethos when the short putt was not only 'scored' but also 'actually valued' as much as the long drive. What TD and others are doing, as in the 1st at OM, is returning the game to that kind of value system, i.e. they are 're-balancing' its elements and in this sense (along with others) trying to return the game to its fundamental roots.
I think that this re-balancing, more than any other element/aspect (like 'minimalism' or 'strategic options' or 'natural bunkers'), is the real and important 'renaissance'. The courses of the so-called Dark Ages were't bad courses, and I don't even think they were bad designs. But in general they were courses/designs that dramatically re-balanced golf's value-system, for a variety of technological and economic reasons -- and did so, I'd suggest, without even realizing it.
Peter