It is not a case of house shots rewarding wild shots. House shots do not reward errant shots. They do not punish small errors as much, but there is a difference. House shots reward more powerful releases in terms of carry. Most people who average better on tournament patterns are accurate lower rev players who do not carry as well on house shots because they are forced to hook around the heavy oil in the middle. I have several times over the years averaged as high on a variety of tournament patterns as I have on house shots in the same center. Higher rev players may not make any bigger mistakes than I do, but their high rev rate magnifies small mistakes more than my low rev rate does. In addition most tournament patterns allow me to play more direct with my forward roll, which enhances my carry. On house shots my carry varies tremendously. Very common for me to shoot a couple of sets under 640 with poor carry, then fire a 740 on when the shot really doesn't seem any different.
Bottom line, the biggest factor that determines how we match up to a pattern is the length of the oil on tournament shots. I can average almost as high on a Cheetah or Badger as I can on a house shot, but I am not going to average close to as much on most 40 foot patterns. On house shots it is less about the length of the oil, because we can control how quickly our ball comes out of the oil by controlling how quickly we get the ball outside the heavy oil line.