When I worked in mission planning cells, we generally had accepted TTP’s (tactics, techniques, and procedures) for various tactical problems. These TTPs are *regularly challenged* and re-jiggered for evolving threats and new technology as well as evolving aircrew skills. If the white hat provided a problem and you worked all day to provide a solution and then presented it publicly at a “murder board” (where a bunch of equally experienced operators get to try and kill your plan), you better have a damn good reason for not executing an accepted TTP.
Bottom line is this, if you were the type of planner that regularly said stuff outside the box cause it’s sexy and makes people think, you generally weren’t considered cognitively talented enough to be good at that gig. Challenging convention had to be met with a an equally compelling argument. If you didn’t have that, you were just tossing poop at the wall and hoping for art.
I think if someone was regularly saying Pine Valley is too hard to be a 10, Pasatiempo is too hard of a walk, Oakmont is one-dimensional, Dornoch’s greens are too severe to be a 10, etc., we’d all question that enthusiast’s ability to talk about golf courses. No?