I designed one once and it turned out to be a fan fave. When I asked why the answer was "I can hit it almost anywhere and still end up on the green...or "I can hit almost any club from 8 to 5 iron and it still ends up on the green".
Ask not what the golfer can do by himself, ask what the course can do for the golfer
Jeff, are you talking about the right half of that short par 4 at the Wilderness? That was a cool and fun green.
Bill,
No, my only true punchbowl is the fifth at Ridgeview Ranch in Plano, Tx. That is more of a Redan in MN (followed by a Biarritz!) I think they were asking the other Jeff, but yeah, drainage can be a problem. The one at Kingsley in sandy soil has no true surface drain outlet, but most should. Raynor used to sneak a swale out the side on his, with the one at Blue Mound being a prime example, and I would try to do the same. There are even some problems with the tops of the greens, where all the water comes down the slopes. In a USGA green, its wise to add some tiles at the top of the green to try to get some of that water before it crosses the whole surface.
The one that I built, I cut the green into the slope and it turns out there was a spring there and we had to tile that one up the slope and through the green to dry it out later on. If I had known that I might have put a six inch pipe through the green to handle the extra and constant flow.