I didn't put any money on it...
Jaime Diaz pointed out this week that some of the best just don't know how to win and indirectly, Tiger was facing a deeper field than Nicklaus, but a weaker field at the top...
Nicklaus said to his players at the ryder cup at muirfield village: you guys don't know how to win, especially in big events
Look at the scores for players scores that were par or under starting the round for the championship (players with potentially a chance to win):
Yang: 70
Westwood 70 (starting from 7 behind)
McIlroy 70 (starting from 7 behind)
Glover 74
Kaymer 73
Els 74
Kjelsen 74
Stenson 75
Harrington 78
McDowell 72
Molinari 72
Singh 73
Clark 74
Pavin 75 (can't blame him though)
Fisher 76
Ames 76
Flesch 76
Jones 77
Rollins 77
Quiros 77
Toms 77
If you take Yang out of the equation: it means TW would have stepped on the 1st tee of the final rounds of a major, with a 2 stroke lead, then gone out and shoot 75 and still win by 2
On a par 72 course with 4 par 5
?
I would definitely prefer to face 156 guys who have a hard time figuring out how to win...
than facing only a field of those 6 names for a major: Trevino, Watson, Ballesteros, Miller, Floyd, Player