TEP - I'd guess that Crane would not have been a fan of scoring spreads.
Given the emphasis he placed on "shot controls" (read: rough and other hazards) and on the idea that good and bad shots were to be proportionately and predictably rewarded or punished, as the case may be, he would not have liked the 12th at TOC.
The 12th has relatively few "controls", the rewards for good shots are uncertain given the fw bunkering. And the punishment for wild tee balls is, at best, unpredicatable and not proportionate to the degree of the error.
In fact, as Bill McB notes above, you can shove it wild right off the tee and have a pretty good shot into the green. That sort of outcome made Crane cringe.
Which leads me to think that on a good Cranian hole there would be a compression of scoring among similarly skilled players. Another way of looking at things is that the narrowest scoring spreads tend to be on US Open set-ups. Crane predicted, almost verbatim, the US Open set-up philosophy.
Bob