I hit a lot of pitches and chips so the way I am coming into a green with exterior and interior contours matters a lot for me. As noted, I understand the basic point in the other thread, but for me the exception of “except when the ball is on the ground” swallows the rule. I did not mention Hope Valley where we are members, but it is Ross design and has several holes where depending on your angle the green runs quite a bit away from you.
Hitting a pitch shot for your birdie is not the way to score. Yes, there are better places to leave a shot off the green if you're going to miss the green, but often that's just "don't short-side yourself" without as much concern about the angle.
If y'all want to take this as a claim toward "see, angles matter…" you're skipping ahead too far. You can still evaluate the "trouble" around the green and play to the safest spot. In LSW terms, that's just the "lightest" colored Shot Zone. Because… you're still just trying to hit the green, with a little bit of preference for where you might miss it (same way as if there was a pretty big target with a bunker intruding, you'd shade away from it a little in favor of missing the ball in the rough or something).
The saddest part of it is that the guys who say "angles don't matter" also try to talk great players out of using their shotmaking abilities, and just always play the same shot with which they are most consistent. And that may be the correct approach statistically, but it is just taking all the life out of the game.
That is two different things.
If a fade player wants to try to hit a draw to a left pin… he's still best advised to hit it in the same place in the fairway, and honestly he's still best advised to hit his fade… but he's welcome to try to hit a draw… and it still doesn't change the math on the "angles don't matter much" stuff.
So, yes, players are best advised to play one shot shape. Master that, and hit it just about everywhere you can. But that is different than the angles talk.
For me, it was only ever a conversation about “The strategic school of design matters less than we think”.
Much less so. It used to matter more, but… we've figured out the math. Just as basketball has figured out the math, and baseball, and football…
I get why Pros teach the statistical method. Even 15 handicappers want to improve their score. But my guesses are (a) the improvement in score is very marginal statistically (b) they might actually score better if they learned a variety of shots and (c) they would have a lot more fun if they embraced (b).
No to A and B. Who can say with regards to C, but a lot of people enjoy shooting lower scores more than they do "learning a variety of shots" (and many don't have the time to learn a variety of shots).