With the possible exception of Jim and Jeff, none of the rest of us on this thread know what we're talking about.
Smaller/less talented fields, technology, winning percentage etc. What does any of that mean? The very greatest players stand apart from and above all of that, all of those 'analytics' forged in the feverish brains of a group of couch potatoes.
Only the (very very) small number of other great players have a true insight into what golf mastery is all about.
Yes, I'm a Jack man myself, but Tiger I say is the best of all time -- but that means nothing coming from me (or you).
And in regards the other Mr. 82, for all I know *he* was the greatest of all time.
Why?
Exhibit A, from the article: of all the millions of golf shots he's played and seen played, Lee Trevino says the one that stands out the most is a shot that Snead hit:
Driver, off the fairway, with the ball below his feet -- a high draw to a right-hand flag from 220 yards, with water on the right. “He took very little time, just hit it and reacted like it was something he did all the time.” [Note: Sam was in his mid 50s at the time, using a steel shafted 43 inch driver with a persimmon head.]
Exhibit B:
From Dan Jenkins, the most devoted of Hogan men: “The weeks where Sam showed up with his best game, I’d feel hopeless and mad because I knew Ben couldn’t beat him. No one could.”
Am I saying Sam Snead was the GOAT? No.
But what the hell would I know about it anyway? Or you?