I didn't mean to imply that anyone implied Westwood whined about landing in a divot. Frankly, playing out of divots is a rather common occurrence, and complaining about it is counter-productive/negative goal setting (Norman vs. Watson example makes this point).
Players will get a variety of breaks during the course of a round. Bryson's drive on 16, bouncing opposite of the contour, shape of the shot (tiny fade), and left-to-right hole design to near the lip of the fairway bunker was a bad break that should have benefited Westwood. Lee not being able to get a short iron, maybe a 9, on the green was far more consequential than the lie on 18.
Lee also got a favorable ruling on his ball being on the green (15?- the TV angle showed a darker shade of green in front of his ball short of the actual putting green- the rule is that the ball must be touching the green for it to be on the green, not that part of the ball hovers above the line). And Bryson got one on the relief granted for being within two club-lengths from the sprinkler heads on 16. The camera shots on both rulings seemed to be from good angles and to me at least, suggested too much generosity.