It was a putting contest. Throw a dart and putt it.
They practically could have held it at a driving range with a green nearby.
The guy who struck the ball best (according to strokes gains statistics) won. He came in 12th in putting.
The guy who putted the best, again judged by strokes gained, came in 4th.
You have a subtle mind at times, Garland, so I'm curious to hear how you reconcile the facts with your assertion.
Have to wonder who came in 4th. Every standings I've seen doesn't have anyone.
Dubuisson matched Rory when you average the strokes gained category ranks except putting. But, he finished five strokes behind. Clearly it was a putting contest between him and Rory that he lost big time.
However, what you are talking about and my above example is a single data point (one tournament among many). The point is that if you do the statistics over an appropriate data set of like tournaments, putting will become more and more significant. Perhaps I should have written "virtually a putting contest", because it obviously wasn't absolutely a putting contest, which I thought people would understand.
Architects have been wanting to fight against a tendency to elevate the importance of putting for a long time. In the early years of golf architecture, they seriously considered dropping six greens from 18 hole courses to make the game more ball striking and less putting.