Vintage (wide) spacing worked OK when frets were vintage (low) and medium strings were gauged 12-56, back when Strats and Teles were introduced. The combination of light strings for playing styles that encompass string bending and high frets means that Fender's vintage bridge spacing is too wide, or the necks are too narrow.... The "classic" Floyd Rose spacing copied Fender's wide bridge, and one reason that Ibanez sells so many guitars to locking-tremolo users is that Ibanez fixed the bridge width. There are certain advantages and disadvantages to either spacing, regardless of neck width - for example, it is easier to fingerpick with the wider spacing, but not at the cost of the strings running out of fret.
A number of custom luthiers basically make their bones by providing entire guitars that have necks wide enough to use the "classic" bridge spacing. I for one wish that what are called "superwide" necks became the new standard, because it is a sort of ridiculous "problem" that you can buy a $2,000 guitar and the strings fall off the neck, but for now both Warmoth and USA Custom charge extra for a neck that fits a "standard" width bridge, in fact USA Custom only sells them with a matching extra-wide neck pocket-routed (2-5/16") body... but thems the breaks. Evolution doesn't proceed evenly, witness human sinuses that still drain forward not down (if you stayed on your hands and knees, there would be no sinus problems) and the whole lower-back thing hasn't been worked out yet... though the next "big hit mutation" may be either a digestive tract that can subsist entirely on synthetic foods, or a brain that can exist on specious nonsense only. Break out the neck bolts and battery clamps kids, opporknockity tunes....