I try never to get under the fiber either by sliding. I try to cut across the fibers with a supporting fiber behind it for a clean surface.
Getting under the fibers always produces tearout and a poor quality surface.
Here's a little experiment for you. Requires a pocketknife, substitute for a gouge, and a piece of wood long enough to hold with a full hand and still have six-eight inches beyond. Lay the blade on the wood with nearly no clearance angle ("riding" the bevel), and you'll find you really can't get much going at all. Lift to get a 20-30 clearance angle and you'll get to a point where you can cut pretty cleanly across the fibers. Don't dig in too far, maintain that high angle, and try to get a smooth cut. Can't do it, because you're compressing and pushing, trying to get things out of the way. Now start the same cross entry and immediately lower the clearance angle to maybe 5-10, and you'll find you can stay under the wood and get a pretty smooth surface after the edge passes. With a bit of think, you'll realize that this is why I like to arc the tool into the surface to start and almost immediately get under to start a shaving.
Now do the same, only skew the edge to the direction of the cut as you begin to push. Meeting a lot less resistance, right? Makes the wood think it's being planed at an even lower angle than it actually is. Now you're shaving and skewing, so let's try a shear.
Make your rotating entry cut fairly close to the near end of the blade, skew, and draw the blade across the stick as you progress. You have to do the draw here, rather than let the rotation draw it down the edge as on the lathe. Now you're shaving, skewing, and shearing simultaneously. Experiment with different degrees of skew and shear, and you'll find that the basic 2-dimensional cut doesn't get much benefit from shear, compared to lower angle and skew. When you have a curved surface like the gouge, engaging a curved surface like the inside of a bowl, the shape makes a fine shear, where any point higher on the gouge than the point of original contact can be sheared to deepen the initial cut. Why I like the noses ground in an arc of a circle, something that produces a narrow sweet spot with a "bowl" grind.
Scraping is also a possibility, if you're not using broad sweep gouges. You have to get at an angle of 90 degrees or better to scrape straight ahead, and when you try, you'll feel the fuzz where things compressed and broke rather than sliced. Go past 90 and you'll be "negative" scraping, and get a better surface. Skew will help, but shear will deepen the cut, the recipe for disaster for ham-handed scrapers.