Tom Doak,
OK, re-reading what you said again I guess I must have misread it before, you do clearly say that having places where it is impossible to get up and down is OK now and then, which I do agree with. I guess I was fixated on the sentence about "trying to imagine all the shots and how they can be managed".
I've got nothing against a steady diet of having to make a 5 or 10 footer to convert for par even with perfect short game execution, if I'm missing in the wrong spots. As for the lake, I don't even have a problem with that if it is a matter of leaving the ball in the wrong spot and being presented with a choice of "try to get close and risk the water" or "play away from the hole avoiding the risk of getting wet and take your medicine" That makes the choice more obvious, but sometimes making the bold play risks an outcome that is just as bad as hitting into the water, stroke-wise.
Given how good of a putter I hear you are now, I can well imagine you had a scratch or plus handicap short game when you played regularly, even if you weren't quite that good overall. So it sounds like finding the bad spots around your greens would give me all the challenge I need plus a little more. Can't wait to give it a try sometime
Adam Clayman,
The point about my 'heroic' shot wasn't that it lowered my score, but that I took on the challenge and succeeded. If I was all about score, I'd never try that shot, the percentage play would have been to play away from the hole and a bit long, and take my two putt bogey from 30-40 feet. I'm sure that would minimize my score in the long run because it'd take double out of play. Anyway, I was even less about score yesterday than I normally am since I hurt my left knee about a month ago and am still sort of gimpy so I knew my final score would not be all that great. That shot plus a few other really nifty ones are what keeps me coming back, especially when I (literally) limp in with an 87!