USGA greens do a couple things well:
They drain well, while maintaining some moisture in the rootzone because of the perched water table(a brilliant design(or discovery),IMO)
They don’t compact like native soils typically do. This has everything to do with the USGA guidelines concerning particle size/ distribution
USGA greens are not so good at some other things:
Nutrient retention, which results in the very unnatural fertility regimes that supers must implement to keep the plant “healthy” (I hate that term, as it is so often misused in the context of golf turf)
Microbial habitat
Either way, my opinion is that the biggest enemy of any soil, or construction method as it pertains to golf greens, is near-constant application of irrigation water(I don’t care whether it comes from a hose end or a sprinkler nozzle). It hurts the microbes, it causes compaction, and it’s an unnatural cycle. I also think that we humans are constantly trying to outsmart the natural processes, but we’re not smart enough to conquer them.