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The PAS technique is intended to optimize clarity and pickup of the direct sound from the stage and PA as much as possible compared to the reverberant and crowd sound. Doing that is more important than optimizing the "stereo-ness" of the recording, which is more of a secondary nice-to-have thing in the grand scheme of what is most important for a recording to sound acceptable. PAS using an even more directional pickup pattern than cardioid, such as supercardioid or hypercardioid, can help even more with this. Good stereo imaging and envelopment isn't worth much if the main sound of interest is overly distant, muddy, and buried in room reverb and crowd noise. Moving the recording position is the best answer, but that isn't always possible, so this helps makes the best of a position which may be a bit too far back, is too reverberant or has more crowd noise than one wants.
When your stereo mic setup has only a minimal amount of angle between the pair of mics, as is usually the case with a PAS setup, using a wider spacing as compensation is a compromise to improve the "stereo-ness" of the recording. What you loose in level-difference between channels by the mics not being angled apart as much, is compensated for by having more time-difference between channels from the wider spacing.
Basically what this is doing is trading level-difference stereo (produced by the angle between directional mics) against time-difference stereo (produced by the spacing between mics). A narrow angle and close spacing will produce a rather monoish recording. A wide angle and too much spacing produces a hole in the middle. But within those extremes we can trade angle against spacing to some extent, and the PAS table is a way of doing that to best effect while maximizing clarity and pickup of the direct sound by having directional mics pointed directly at the sound sources of interest.