AG - I believe Jones' win percentage was as good as if not better than Tiger's if memory serves correct.
Certainly might have been; I don't know. It is hard to compare Jones with either Jack or Tiger because of the changes in what was considered to be a major.
I do think, though, that deciding that a career total is THE standard is a bit limiting to serious analysis. That is ONE way to measure an athlete, but it is not the only way, and if you are trying to determine "the best of all-time" instead of "the best for a long time", it probably isn't the best way.
As an example, Hank Aaron beat Willie Mays in HR's, RBI's, total bases, and so on. I don't think, however, that a single GM would have taken Aaron over Mays in their primes, which were roughly contemperaneous. Mays dominated in a way that Aaron, as great as he was, never did. Mantle, in turn, was even better at his peak than Mays; his peak just didn't last very long. Longevity and dominance are NOT the same.
The media loves the number 18 because it is easy, and the public generally loves it for the same reason. I'm just saying there is more to a career than that one standard, and by every other possible measure Tiger has already eclipsed everybody else in the history of golf. If he didn't play another tournament, ONLY the record for majors would be left outside his grasp, and that would be a matter only of longevity, NOT dominance.
Isn't going to matter, though. Tiger will have 19 majors before he is 40, and he may have them before he is 35. That'll take care of the remaining doubters, I should think.