@will8764 I think it REALLY depends on your gym.
This might not be the most popular answer but here goes....
At my gym we have some serious athletes who are NFL players that work out with us during the off-season.
We also have people like me in their mid-30s who never worked out until 4 years ago and have lost 50 pounds.
Our gym accommodates both.
I can do handstand push-ups kipping but not do 50 because I've got shit shoulders. Forget strict. Ain't gonna happen.
For 19.1 and 19.2 I was able to Rx and do decently.
For 19.3 there was no chance in hell I could Rx that.
So for scoring the open, my coach said....do the first two movements at Rx, which I did. But your score will be a time cap and the only reps that count are the lunges and step-ups if you finish them. For the next two movements I did flash push-ups which still hurt like a bitch because of my shoulders but risked no injury to my neck and a bear crawl that had to be left hand right foot and right hand left foot movements or it was a no-rep.
My coach knew my limits and didn't want me to hurt myself and jack my neck up because my shoulders are bad. That didn't keep me from competing as far as I could.
My coach knew I wanted to work out hard for 10 minutes and I did.
Am I ever making the games? Hell no. Was I able to work out with my community of fellow Crossfitters who did the strict standards. Yes, I was.
Some people need to lighten up at their local gym. There will be some people who MIGHT be able to go to the games and those athletes need to adhere to the strict standards.
Other athletes like myself Rx what they can and scale what they can't.
The only thing I fully buy into in some of these responses is athletes are only cheating themselves if they power clean a squat clean or don't get full depth on a wall ball. The better your form and completing the movements, the better your workout and MUCH less of a chance you'll hurt yourself in big movements.