Riddle me this:
If Oakmont's rough was so brutal - automatic hack it out rough, as every pro seems to allege - how did Cabrera shoot 69 and win when he hit 5 fairways?
And how did Tiger not go lower on Saturday, when he hit so many fairways and so little rough?
I'll take a stab at these. Cabrera missed 11 fairways, but I'm guessing he didn't hit much into the deep stuff. His ball stayed in the 1st cut, which was light enough for him to control his 2nd shots.
That 1st cut is also why the overall cost of rough was not higher. It averaged slightly over a half stroke for the whole tournament, IIRC. If Oakmont had cut the primary all the way to the fairways, scores would have really soared. Mid 290's might have won.
Tiger didn't go lower on Saturday because he missed a number of shortish putts. He missed them because a) he was often on the wrong side of the hole, leaving himself big-breaking, lightning-fast birdie tries, and b) he didn't putt well.
Also, even though he hit so many greens, he didn't hit the ball stiff on any of them.
Those are my spec's, anyway, George.
ETA: the one time Tiger did miss a green, on 18, he didn't make par. The 18th hole cost Tiger dearly at both the U.S. Open and the Masters. He played each of them 2 over par. That might have cost him both tournaments.