I love Strantz courses. However, that is mostly because I love the artistry and admire it.
It doesn't get much press anymore, but there was an old concept of good gca being a balance of aesthetics, playability, and maintainability. Obviously, it is not always a balanced triangle, with public courses, for example, typically tilting the triangle to maintainability factors. Mike's work shows what can be incredibly created when tilting towards aesthetics.
Have told the story before, but I took the Quarry reps to Tobacco Road and Fazio's World Woods to give an idea of what I was planning at the Quarry. Got a yes to WW and a "nice look, but tone it down" to TR, which I think we did and Quarry seems well received. As you can tell, my take is that I would love to take some of his artistry, but would probably tone it down when considering other factors as a better balance overall.
We used to have that debate in LA school about reality often intruding on "pure design" whatever that is. And, gca and la aren't pure art, which is only to be looked at, but design, which needs to serve some practical function well in addition to looking good. I think that is the reason Mike's works get downgraded a bit in many eyes. As to Peter's "assess it on his terms" comment, most people have trouble assessing anything in terms of anything other than "how does it affect me?" LOL, but not sure any of us should get a pass on that.
Another architect who gets that rep was Von Hagge, who openly admitted that he designed his courses for shadows, often from surrounding real estate as much as for the golfer, and he didn't care if it played all that well or not.