Tom, Tom, Tom, one might simply say that you are quick to make assumptions over what others mean when they themselves haven't elucidated on the subject in question...
(I've been wanting to use elucidate in something past few days.
)
I neither hinted at nor stated that my opinion that Tiger has "a bit of a ways to go" still before he would be considered the greatest of all time was based upon his needing to surpass Nicklaus 18 victories.
That is not what holds me back, yet there is much to say for someone who achieves it.
You make a good point and then completely ignore it without realizing it when you said, "if odd fate and tragedy somehow took Woods out today the fact that he didn't reach 18 majors and what that would mean in how he stacks up against the rest would become almost completely irrelevent in the light of history and greatness..."
Well, hasn't that already happen, in a different sort of fashion, to one who has already held the "greatest of all time" mantle in golf... Bobby Jones?
Didn't he, quite tragically in the eyes of many, give up competitive golf at a relatively early age where if he had continued to play in his mid-40's it would be quite safe to assume that he would have won many more majors, and may have reached a number where Jack might still be playing today to try and catch him?
If Jack was greater than the greatest of all time, then why did he have to surpass a number in order to be appreciated as such? Yet if some, and again I'm not one of them, believe that Tiger must do the same, they somehow have an inability to appreciate the nuances of "contemporary history?"
Sorry Tom, but your reasoning as I see it doesn't hold...
p.s. - Wayne, playing in Philadelphia doesn't automatically make one the greatest. I have three words for you - Oscar, Oscar, Oscar