[To enforce] learning the distance and location of the leap, developing the discipline of landing on the correct keys, and removes the serendipity of relying on a random plunk in a general direction on the keyboard in hopes you hit the correct keys.
I couldn't have said it better.
IMHO it's really as much an exercise in theory as it is in technique, at least in jazz practice: there can't be any wrong notes, neither in the bass nor in the middle of the keyboard. People won't stand for it: there just cannot be any wrong notes. Unless you're a famous player and knows how to do it. Regular people: can't be any wrong notes. Impossible.
At the very least, if you're in a passage in Ab, you should be able to manage from the lowest Ab to some kind of inversion of an Ab triad in the middle of the keyboard, even if it's not exactly what's written. That's not what I would call "playing by ear" but just "playing by common sense."
And, if in the middle of a "leap" or a "jump," one is not well disposed, well, one has a few milliseconds to correct it in one's mind before changing voicings so that the sound is acceptable. Or, in the worst case, one misses the bass motion, one should be listening, so you possibly change that as well to an alternate line in bass.
For popular music like this, you really can't have wrong notes: it's not like playing Webern ; ) where you can pretend you meant to do that. So, it has to sound good. By hook or by crook.
You need a backup plan for your backup plan and a backup plan for your backup to your backup plan: either way, failure is not an option. If you're on stage, what are you going to stop and start again? No. Play it.
I don't know: one has to think fast and act fast, and have a bunch of tricks in case one makes a mistake in order that one make it sound good.
Sounds a bit cynical, but that's what I know how to do.