Let me first say that what follows may be idiocy. Just so we're clear.
Matt, when you talk about penalizing the poor shot, and rewarding the good shot, I immediately get what you mean.....until I really start thinking about it. I don't mean to be overly arcane, but I'm going to make the assumption that you mean a "good shot" as defined by what is required to score well, or advance the cause of scoring well on that given shot. Given that the shot has achieved what was needed at that time on that hole, how can it possibly be that it has not in some way reaped whatever reward might be available? If there is another place to hit the ball on that hole that yields a better approach, etc. (in other words, yields a better reward), then wouldn't a shot placed there be, by definition, a better shot?
Aren't poor shots, then, simply shots that do not fulfill the requirements needed on that shot, and therefore reap no rewards?
Maybe what I'm asking for, as a simple cave man, is examples of where a good shot is not rewarded, or where a bad shot IS rewarded. It seems to me a conundrum.
Is it merely that the AMOUNT of reward isn't sufficient to make hitting a better shot truly worthwile? That there needs to be more in it for the better golfer to shoot for? Or perhaps that the lesser shot is not humbled to the proper and desired degree?
I believe my mind to be open, but it gets a little confuddled in there sometimes...........