Last June I did two rounds as a walking scorer for the NCAA National Championships in Stillwater, OK.
The first day I had Peter Uihlein, Pat Cantlay and Bud Cauley, three of the best amateurs on the planet at the time.
Second day I had Bo Hoag, Cameron Peck and
Two things,
Bo is the slowest player I have ever seen--ANYWHERE. Sadly, Cameron is one of the fastest. If I'd been him, I'd have been forced to...
Uihlein (on his home course) and Cantlay were astonishingly fearless.
But to be honest, when you can hit play a 471-yard par four with a three wood and an eight iron, as Uihlein did, conventional strategy may not seem all that necessary. Still, he started 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 3, which put him 5 under through seven but "only" shot 68 on a 7400-yard course.
Cantlay shot the same score, without the fireworks. But he did demonstrate how important it is to never give up on a hole when he hit it over the green on the sixth. Between two trees in foot-high grass, he had to take an unplayable--which forced him to drop in that same grass. From there he got up and down for bogey.
I did see examples of questionable thinking, but their belief in themselves (justifiable, IMHO) is so high they don't often see the need to play safe.
K