A couple of thoughts on several of the postings above:
- I'd be very careful comparing Tiger, or any other top 10 player's stats, to a typical Tour players averages over the course of a year. The top top guys, who play the Majors, the WGC'S, Players, Memorial but skip events like Palm Springs, etc, could have the events they play/don't play have a dramatic effect on putting performance, GIR etc. Along those same lines, just randomly not playing one tournament with horrible weather, like Torrey last year, can have a major effect on your stats for the year if you are only making 22-25 starts.
- For me, this is what's most remarkable about Tiger's no cut streak, or Jack's performance in the majors for two straight decades. They both had to have multiple instances where they were on the wrong side of the weather, they were sick, etc but fought their way through it. Riviera just happens to be a place where Tiger came up a putt or two short a couple of times.
- Finally, from my limited experience of working with Tour players, the majority understand after the fact why they played well in any particular event, but I have noticed almost zero correlation between where my guys think their games should do well vs where they actually have good results. I'd argue from my observations that there are so many more factors that go into good play - energy level, nutrition, playing partner, pace of play, personal issues etc etc etc, that, outside of the true top 10 world class players, you'd have a very hard time predicting how a player will do on an average week, even after listening to how that player tells you how HE thinks he will do. I'm in a fantasy golf league, and the Pro's in the league, who are allowed to pick themselves, are always near the bottom, with the caddys, wives and others "in the know" not much better.
In summary, I just think the more ways we are able to slice up and measure the outcomes of play , the more we risk drawing too strong a conclusion on what's created those outcomes. Especially on a game played on a bumpy playing surface spread out over hundreds of acres, and with a schedule that takes them all over the world and onto every type of course design. Just lots and lots and lots of variables, without enough repetitions to build reliable analysis on a detailed level.
My two cents.