I have to agree with what Tony said. And if you look at fig 8 of the EVM specsheet you'll see the frequency/impedance plot which clearly shows that even with good matching of OT and speaker, this matching is only valid at certain frequencies. But do we play at only these frequencies? Of course we don't! We also play at frequencies at which the impedance will be higher. This will cause stronger flyback currents to occur at those frequencies. To complicate things.... the impedance plot was made with the speaker in a TL806. The plot will be different for a EVM in an open back cabinet. I cannot find it right now but I recal that WeberVST had plots of many speakers brands in both open and closed back on their website, but I digress.
The key thing is that it poweramp design is a balance between tone, power and reliability. Those Fender (Schumacher?) OT's are extremely durable. My comment about blowing OT's pertained to bassman OT copies made by a small European transformer manufacturer around 2000-2005. Those OT's arced at the primary and poweroutput dropped to a couple of watts.
In the graph I posted you'll see that there is a wide peak where the powertube will generate it's power. In the tube datasheets you'll often find recommended plate loads that are a lot higher than what you'll see in tube guitar amps. Fender was one of them and they probably did this to increase power output from their designs. It also reduced back EMF. However, the tubes will often redplate when dimed at this setting because they put out more power than the were designed to do.
In the case of the ODS 70's combo's, HAD must have decided in favor of operating the powertubes closer to the datasheets recommendations (I always call them 'guidelines'

) because, and I'm guessing, he liked the tone better of the higher Z, did not want to redplate the tubes at max settings and relied on the quality if the Fender output transformers. I haven't heard of too many 70's ODS amps blowing up, so these OT's pretty much hold up. I would not worry about it. Since materials age and the insulation on the OT wires may get brittle at some point causing failure causing any amp to get issues at some point. Plus, these bassman OT's can still be found on ebay, etc. So if I would own an amp like that, I'd use it because for me, amps are tools to generate tones and if it breaks, I'd fix it and continue to play it. On the other hand, if you want to preserve a museum piece....put it in a glass box.
jelle