One individual's ranking system does just that (I forget his name). You take all the evens that Wie played in. You copare her results against each other player that played thoes events. Then you rank by how each player did relative to each other player in those events they played in common. At one time Wie came out on top in this comparison.
Golfweek/Sagarin.
http://www.golfweekrankings.com/template/default.asp?t=lpgaAlthough she was #1, she never had enough events to make into the published list.
To see her ranking, you have to put her name in the search box.
FWIW, she's currently ranked 40th (with an asterisk for not enough events). I looked at it earlier this year and shes was in the 100s
The methodology is:
Jeff Sagarin’s rating system is based on a mathematical formula that uses a player’s won-lost-tied record against other players when they play on the same course on the same day, and the stroke differential between those players, then links all players to one another based on common opponents. The ratings give an indication of who is playing well over the past 52 weeks.
The following list is an explanation of each category Sagarin uses to formulate his rankings.
POWER RATING: This is NOT a stroke average. The rating is calculated using a player’s record, stroke differential and connection to all the other players in the database. However, It does represent the typical score you can expect a player to shoot; the difference between two ratings predicts the difference between two players in a typical round.
SCHEDULE STRENGTH: The average strength of each event in which the player has played, calculated using the power ratings of every player in every field.
SCHEDULE RANK: The player’s schedule is ranked by difficulty among the entire database.
RECORDS: A player’s won-lost-tied record, based on head-to-head competition, in each category. The winner in a 156-player field has a record of 155-0-0, the runner-up is 154-1-0, etc.
EVENTS PLAYED:
MEN -- 11 needed to qualify on nine worldwide tours: PGA Tour, PGA European Tour, Nationwide Tour, Japan Golf Tour, Southern Africa Tour, PGA Tour of AustralAsia, Asian PGA Tour, European Challenge Tour and the Canadian Tour.
WOMEN -- 10 needed to qualify on four worldwide tours: LPGA Tour, Ladies European Tour, Duramed FUTURES Tour and the Japan LPGA Tour.
Ke