You used the phrase “slower than anticipated” to describe the practice green at Rivermont. Literally, you are the first person I’ve ever heard refer to ANY green at Rivermont that way. I could put your ball in a place on any green with any pin at Rivermont and you wouldn’t be able to stop the ball near the hole, and I don’t care how good a putter you are. Period.
Find a better example.
The first time I ever played Rivermont with Mac Plumart I recall that this was how he introduced the greens to me and my experiences have echoed that since. The cut of the green isn't exceptionally low, but the contouring made them appear to play much faster. I believe Chris ones saying the greens were designed to play no faster than a 10. Which as a max, would not be considered fast for modern greens.
Your challenge has a lot more to do with the contouring on the greens than the height of the grass cut. The same challenge could be proposed to you on quite a number of greens at Chastain Park. Over the last year. I've watched people hit fairly good putts only for them to roll off the 6th, 8th, 10th, 12th, 13th, 16th, and 18th greens. I myself had a putt from behind the hole to a back left pin on 13 barely trickle past the cup and proceed to roll another 60 feet to the front of the green. So are the greens fast, or do the greens have enough contour to provide an equalizing challenge when not cut as short?
But this is the point, and why Rivermont is such a good example. If a player is coming from another Atlanta course like Berkeley Hills, where their greens are kept in the 11.5-12 range, Rivermont running at a 10 or less would at first glance appear to be much slower. But Berkeley Hills has much flatter greens than Rivermont, so from a playability standpoint the two sets of greens would perform similarly. If Rivermont's greens were taken to 12, they may become unplayable. If Berkeley Hills greens were slowed down to below 10, they may become to benign to present a sizeable challenge.
My use of Rivermont has been very complementary. What Mike and Chris decided to do with the green was in opposition of the modern trend of flatter and faster, and they should be commended for it. I would much rather see more courses go this direction than the opposite. Why you've taken offense to my commentary and can't stand even the hint of the words Rivermont greens and slow existing in the same sentence is beyond me.