I love me a spaced pair that LOOKS like it's cool and picking up everything, with the left OH so much further away from the snare that it's wildly obviously out of phase with the other OH! Oh and don't forget to angle the mics outwards because we're not micing drums here, just cymbals! We'll just fix it in the mix!
In all seriousness though, judging by what I read alot of people doing, videos and pictures I've seen, it seems to me my above sarcastic statement is actually reality in a LOT of cases. haha.
To answer your question, I've recently got into Recorderman, but having them a few inches higher/further than the standard two-drum-stick-from-the-snare measurement. Instantly gave me more ambience, and a more balanced image of the whole kit. The standard Recorderman tends to focus and really punch up the drums but sort of de-emphasize the cymbals. I'll do the Recorderman with close mics.
I used to like a spaced pair, but they seem to always take longer to set up and test and get the phase right. It's like, ok, getting them
in phase in easy (just measure and listen) but then the actual sounds you are recording may not sound great. So you move em to pick up more china cymbal or more/less hats, etc, and then they're out of phase again. So finding a happy medium between the two takes a lot more time then doing a quick Recorderman. That's my flavor of the month anyways. Great for lower ceilings also.
As for Glyn Johns, it's cool and all, but if you're close mic'ing, I've found the mic nearest the FT sometimes gets phasey issues when you bring in the FT close mic.