Sigh.
Huet wines are cheap relative to what many others are selling their wines at.
Chidaine has increased his land holdings.
Yield, even taking into account vine density, pruning, etc., is at best a weak determinant of what turns up in the bottle. Prüm (Joh. Jos.) and Loosen in their old Wehlener Sonnenuhr holdings, for example. Gigou and Nicolas in Jasnieres, if we stay in France. Lapierre and Thevenet, if it has to be red. Heck, the Berlioz cousins in Savoie. And so on.
Surface area, even taking into account slope gradient, farming techniques, etc., is probably an even weaker determinant of what turns up in the bottle. Perhaps the more refined version of the argument is that estates beyond a certain size are no longer artisanal, and therefore no longer 'good' (where the definition of good includes a large artisanal component), but I think that argument begs the question.
'Quality', beyond loose and porous gradations, is context-dependent. PAB's "nice" is another's piss, and vice-versa.
Authoritative pronouncements often tell us more about the person than the object.
You're welcome.