At my club there are some hole placements where I will deliberately play to miss the green on the proper side rather than playing to the middle of the green leaving a probable 3-putt. One example is the 5th green where a pin way down front is better approached 10 feet short of the green than 30 ft past the pin.
There are also places and times when faced with a long downhill, sidehill, double-breaker (yes, we have some of those), I will be sure to hit it past the hole at the risk of a 3-putt rather than leave it above the hole and introduce the real possibility of a 4 putt. Haven't had one of those in 15 years. A 3-putt bogey is not the end of the world.
I played along side an old, but still very good, amateur who was in a match play competition with a young guy. They both had putts of about 15 feet uphill from about the same position. The old guy putted first and left it 3 feet short, then proceeded to declare that the green was very slow. The young guy hit it 5 feet long and missed the come-backer. Old guy calmly cans his short putt to win the hole. The whole thing was deliberate gamesmanship on his part. I suppose that also qualifies as strategy.