Tom,
Since you don't believe that the GPCC is a fair example due to altitude, lets take another example from his resume of courses, Blair Atholl.
This is what GP wrote in describing the course and is taken directly from the website: "The design, both challenging and rewarding, will allow for the testing of scratch players, yet still ensuring enjoyment for handicapped golfers. The course length is in excess of 7,700 meters (8,500 yards) from the back tees, making it the longest course in South Africa at present."
So this "award winning design" that is some 800 yards longer than CB is not overly long and provides a proper test for the "scratch player" (note scratch not professional which is an interesting choice of words) yet can still ensure enjoyment for handicapped golfers (obviously from different tees) while CB can't? So why have so many on this site written that they enjoyed the rounds that they played there?
My problem with what GP stated was that everything that he went on about he has also done on some of his designs. For example, take a look at the Thracian Cliffs website. Its a wonderfully fun looking course that certainly isn't overly long by any means. But the photographs of several holes show what a few fairways that have a severe can't to them from one side to the other which would certainly create very small areas for some shots to end up regardless of how they are played, which is quite similar to those at CB.
I have no problem with criticisms being leveled at the design or the course set-up, but when he calls it the worst course he has ever seen in his more than 6 decades of play and design and then specifically criticizes it for features that he himself has done, then I feel he should be called out on it.
Mike, I think that addresses your comment in that I'm not challenging his opinion but simply what he based it on.
As for the design I have never been there but from what I've seen of the course on TV I would love to go and play there. That said I believe that the telecast did reveal areas that need softening in the finished product, in particular the fairway entrances and greenside mounding on the holes used as drivable par-4s and reachable in two par-fives as it appeared that one had to hit a perfect shot to get on the green and even then they were unable to get close to the hole for a reasonable chance at eagle. Unfortunately I couldn't decide if that was caused by the set-up, the design or a combination of both.