Yes. The assumption that players will aim for the "middle of the shotgun" because they are trying to be mathematically efficient over their day or season or lifetime is where the discussion goes off the rails. How many people are really playing for that goal? When you go out to play, and you're shooting well above your norm, aren't you going to go for the more thrilling shots? What do you have to lose? Or if you're playing a career best round, do you really want to finish conservatively to protect your 82, instead of trying to break 80?
That's the thing… at the higher levels, they are sticking to it for the most part. They buy into the math, the understanding, the strategy… etc. They know the deviations, too, and they generally know how to adjust given a certain day's requirements.
At the "82 never having broken 80" level, people are generally clueless about this stuff.
I'm not saying you are, but banking on the general population remaining clueless isn't really the way to go about things, it seems to me. Better understandings of golf course strategy are filtering down more each year.
And you're still right more often than you should be… as golfers are human, and they'll "go for" things far more often than they should or could. But not all, and that number is (very slowly) shrinking.
This is a huge part of why I disagree with many about, say, Tobacco Road.
If you're not -- and nobody on this board is making a living off their scores -- I don't really understand the mentality.
You don't understand the mentality of wanting to put together a solid round of golf? At what point does one break from the mentality and try to flag everything? If you're sitting at +8 on the last hole and need a birdie, and a par or double or quad all count the same in your mind, then sure… take on the flag.
But on the 14th hole? That's too early and is going to lead to more 88s than 78s. Heck, we talk about in our book how the strategy leads to the lowest
average score, but you can make adjustments in situations where, say, you're one down in the club stroke play championship with a dangerous hole to play, but you don't care if you make par or quad because second place and fifth place are all the same to you… you just want the win.
But it's playing Russian roulette with two or three bullets in play… Tempt fate too many times and you're probably not going to get the results you want.
I would much rather hit the shots I feel like trying to hit, and enjoy them. So I'm going to design courses around that premise, and tempt you visually to play the cool shots, and if some guru convinces you not to do that, I'm sorry. For you.
You shouldn't. One can take great satisfaction and enjoyment from navigating a course really well. In hitting the shots. In seeing the ball hit the exact window and react when it hits the green the way they pictured.
And again, there are still plenty of opportunities to play interesting and/or difficult shots. Just because someone plays to the outside of a dogleg because there's a horrible bunker on the inside of the dogleg doesn't mean they don't pull the ball into the bunker, or pull it so that it barely skirts by… thus giving them an option to play a running shot onto the green that slopes right to left and will funnel their ball to hole.
"I would much rather hit the shots I feel like trying to hit." Playing the optimal scoring strategy doesn't take that away. The shots you feel like trying to hit are just slightly less risky. You can keep trying to tempt people… but they can also keep trying to avoid the temptation. You're the snake in the garden of Eden… blaming Eve for not taking the apple. (I may have gotten that horribly wrong, as it's been a LONG time since I was in Sunday school!)
I know it's not one of your courses, but for example… I loved my round at Sand Valley. I shot 69 the first time I saw it, and played strategic golf the whole day. There were still plenty of shots I had to "pull off" and shots I had to "go for." Just because you're playing to the safe side of a target doesn't mean you can't still hit a pure shot that hits your window, and it doesn't mean you can't pull or push it slightly. It also doesn't mean the hole isn't cut, sometimes, in the middle of the green, right where you're going to aim, and it doesn't mean you can't feel really satisfied when you birdie a hole after making a 20-footer where each of the two shots prior were hit almost exactly where you were trying to hit them.
And that's not even to get into the idea that even if you generally play "strategic" golf, that you can't also just go to Tobacco Road one day and take on EVERY shot, and have a hoot, and see what you can pull off one out of five times… It's not like golfers who understand strategic golf must
always play that way.