What's the formula? Short par 4 + downhill + skinny green + slight doggy = like Riveria 10th?
That's a good question, if the template is so vague that somebody thinks the 10th at The Belfry fits. [Note: I admire the 10th at The Belfry, and the designers should get credit for coming up with it. I am pretty sure that Riviera was nowhere in their minds.]
As for some of the other examples, the key difference to me is what you see on the hole at Sagebrush. [I thought Rod Whitman designed Sagebrush, not Dick Zokol, but that's for another day.] A pro like Zokol wants to make you carry a hazard to get to the left side of the hole for the preferred angle into the green ... so that only a good player can do it, and everyone else is left with an impossible pitch. That's the professional's definition of risk and reward.
Thomas' definition was much different. He GAVE you the left side of the hole, as long as you didn't try to get too close to the green. That's why he could tighten the screws on the second shot with that VERY narrow green and the wrong-way tilt -- because he gave you no excuse for being to the right. The risk penalty is all in the second shot -- but it results from going for the green and missing to the wrong side.
By contrast, I haven't played the Sagebrush hole, but I'd bet anything that the approach from the right is not nearly as severe as the one at Riviera -- the designer has to rationalize that he couldn't punish the average player that much. But, that's also quite convenient for a professional, since it means that whether he goes left or right, it should still be an easy four for him, and maybe a three.