Mike Young,
Many non-gca's here presume we leave a detailed list of instructions to the super and in this case, Tour Staff, but I doubt many do. So, it might have gotten away from Gil at some later date.
I love Gil and all, and he does great work. That said, given Doral was and was intended to continue to be a tournament course, I would assume Gil knew that the green would be set up at 12+ on the stimp when he designed it. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if the PGA Tour took a look at all of it during construction, but I don't know that they did. I presume he designed that as a Sunday pin.
Architects usually face the question of designing every pin for every wind, green speed, etc. In short, its easy to go the playable anytime in any condition route, and always a bit risky to try something out of the box, even for one pin position, and certainly for more than one Sunday pin, hoping the future set ups will be intelligently done. It seems to me that Gil took a chance on this green, and, when you do that, sometimes it doesn't result in the way you want.
I wonder if he wishes he would have been a bit more conservative now, or if he embraces the criticisms?
That said, the hole is 238. Those USGA Slope studies and Shot Link data, which are empirical, real world, field data, show even top players need about 10% of shot distance in depth and width to hit a target 66% of the time. That pin area probably ought to have been 24 yards circle for that length. It appears to be about half that. Not to mention, that data was probably done on greens that slope to the golfer, since most greens do. A 12-15 yard area, with reverse slope ridge directly in front, and maybe reverse or sideways (to drain out between the bunkers) slope is probably not negotiable by anyone at that distance.
Just guessing, but if the target was a smidge larger, and that ridge turned 90 degrees, so they could fire right at it, or maybe use the ridge contours to deflect closer to the pin, the players would probably have nothing but praise for the options presented. As configured, that pin is probably not considered great design by most pros/good golfers. It seems that at least half ought to be able to hit it close in normal conditions, so it differentiates good and bad shots, rather than treat them all similarly.
It reminds me of a few similar pins I have designed, to go in the field and find a shaper has drained it sideways or backwards (or some angled combo of both) to save bringing in more fill. He doesn't think it makes a difference.......but here is a case where it does, and in my projects, catering to less proficient golfers, it would probably be even more unplayable. Which is another reason the architect needs to do field work......