Congressional was poor, as was the most recent at Bethpage Black, as the set-up allowed far too many players to go far too low too often in a tournament that -- by historical standards, and unique among the majors -- has always been about being the toughest four rounds a golfer will encounter during the year.
Phil - if you recall, both the Bethpage and Congressional Opens got hammered by severe rain before and during the tournaments. Their softness was the main reason for the low scores, not the set up. The weather is the one thing nobody can control - no way to get the water out of the course...
I for one love the Mike Davis era. The impetus on F&F, graduated rough, shaved areas near greens, alternate tees, drivable par 4s, and reachable par 5s (by the whole field) are all great additions to the US Open that I don't think were used often before Mike. What I really like is introduction of risk and reward, which is a direct result of the things previously mentioned. And he has managed to do this all the while keeping it the hardest test in golf (when the weather cooperates). The US Open is now the ultimate test of golf, not the ultimate test of driving your golf ball in the fairway.
Nothing worse than watching a guy miss a fairway by 4 yards and have to hack out with an 8-iron, ala the US Opens of my youth (I'm 27). Graduated rough creates risk/reward and options. Do you take a chance on a flier lie or a hosel grabber to get on or near the green in two? Or do you take your medicine like Woods did twice on #1 this weekend?
Re: the shaved areas. I'm not sure how you could argue against them. The players know they're there, they know where they can't miss, they know if they want to get it close to certain pins they will have to challenge those areas with a miss resulting in a likely bogey. This goes back to that old argument: "nobody would be bitching if those shaved collection areas were water" which I agree with and which is a sad truth... Not to mention all the options of how those recovery shots can be played when compared to a basic hack sand wedge out of thick green side rough.
Drive-able par 4s/reachable par 5s (by the entire field): I have no idea why anyone would argue against these. Especially when the winning score of the tournament was still over par...
Alternate tees: Bogey - I really can't understand your disdain for this... Variety is the spice of life! You have a problem with a 100 yard par 3 that requires a perfectly executed wedge (or less) in order to get within 10 feet? I don't understand how variety is a bad thing. I'd much rather see that then four par 3s of 190, 200, 210, and 235. One or two of that length? Sure! But I don't need to see four long iron/hybrid par 3s. Again,
especially when the winning score was over par.
The other thing to take into consideration is the choice of venues since Davis has taken over (I have no idea how much say he has in this, but I would guess it is meaningful). Also, not sure how far out they were scheduled at the time he took over, but the US Open sites on the docket are phenomenal in my opinion (working backwards):
2019 - Pebble
2018 - Shinnecock
2017 - Erin Hills (all Davis?)
2016 - Oakmont
2015 - Chambers Bay (all Davis?)
2014 - Pinehurst #2
2013 - Merion
Note that there are no duds in that lineup...