I know this issue comes up regularly in one form or another…. And I know I veer away from some respected views on this… but I dislike greens where it isn’t possible to get pretty close to any pin from anywhere on the green. And I certainly dislike greens where a three putt is seen as a par outcome (I.e. a two putt is seen as exceptional) from certain points.
Putting counts for too much already. Without making it 3/5ths of your shots.
As someone who grew up in Texas and learned to use the Texas Wedge from the day I started playing, I think the problem here is not green size, but green speeds. On every single dry, close-cut fairway you'll see me putting from ≈ 50 yards away, and getting close. Yet on many of the same courses, I struggle to get close on 15 ft putts because the surface is like glass, and it's a completely different putting stroke for me. I may be beating a dead horse here, but I see little value at all in large, and especially contoured, fast greens. Ironically, my understanding is that especially fast greens
need to be large because they're more fragile than the green with longer grass that stimp closer to 8, but I may be wrong there. However, I do see value in large, contoured slower greens, where it's just easier to get the speed right, even if it's harder to harder to get line right.
I just think that any course maintenance regime that make a putt more challenging than a chip is counterproductive, yet we regularly see players chipping from the fringe on modern, fast greens because it's easier to spin-stop the ball at the hole than it is to judge the speed of a putt.