You know, the first season, the entire season Bill denied, denied, denied, all while sneaking back and forth between three houses.....In fact, that very same first season the guy couldn't get enough Viagara. He has that going for him too.
I think you should go with it.
Getting back to the point:
The point to all of this is, why not rake? or "To Rake or Not to Rake, that is the question...." (I think.)
To answer D_Malley's question first, its called Rub of the Green. Is every stretch of turf perfect for each and every shot? The beauty of this Sport and its challenge is the challenge with from nature. If player "B" tees off and land at the same exact spot, 6 inches apart from Player "A", And suddenly as Player "A" addresses his approach with a stiff breeze in his face, he hits it and it goes into a bunker. If player "B" proceeds to address his ball and the wind dies down before he even picks a club out of his bag, giving him advantage of less wind and sticks it to with-in 3 feet, what do we call that?
(I call it a natural fucking, but that's only in jest!)
Actually it is RUB OF THE GREEN. Luck. Good luck and bad. Why should it be any different for a foot print in the sand? As the Minimalist Manifesto states, PLAY IT AS IT LIES! We hit the ball and enjoy the sport. If every shot was perfect, we would be bored to tears and not play.
Now getting back to the original point,
Use any major city or town in America and tell me that bunker raking--when the first rake was laid down near a sand hazard, became a practice that will never be broken on that course. The "unknowing" call it good etiquette to properly rake the sand after extrication, but the beauty of the sport is its naturalness. The truest beauty of all. (well maybe if Kate Winslet wasn't standing near-by.)
Yes, today it is common practice and I use a rake because of the local code and ethics, but honestly, there is nothing better then being challenged with a fried egg, foot print lie and then literally blowing it out of there and still have a chance at par. I know I'm in a very weak minority here, and you may call it Alpine Golf if you wish, but honestly, it isn't. Its just willing to be able to suffice that every shot is a challenge and to accept that challenge is the truest source of sportsmanship. That is the sport of Golf's essence.
It just can't get any simpler then that.