Littlehorny wrote: » Would take Monty off that list TBH but would add Ballesteros and Langer to it.
GreeBo wrote: » So, who are your greats and what makes them great? For me, in no particular order (and sticking to the players from my era): Arnie Player Jack Tom Faldo Norman Seve Monty Phil Tiger And those with potential to make my list: Koepka McIlroy DJ
blue note wrote: » It's one of those nonsense
Miley Byrne wrote: » Monty in and no McIlroy:D:D:D (Ask Monty would he prefer 4 majors or all of his order of merits and if he choses the latter he is lying)
Russman wrote: » Slightly on the fence about Lyle, Woosnam & Ollie, but ok we'll give them a pass, particularly Lyle & Ollie, Woosie is flip a coin..
Russman wrote: » Harrington (some won't agree but for me, 3 Majors including back to back and defending The Open, gets him in) Nick Price Vijay Singh and Retief Goosen get in because multiple Majors in the Tiger era is very impressive.
Russman wrote: » Currently: Koepka, don't like him but 4 Majors says it all. Spieth, I don't think he's anywhere nearly as good as the others, but 3 different Majors squeezes him in, but I could easily be talked into evicting him ! DJ, no, not quite yet for me. Nearly, probably in two years time.
blue note wrote: » McIlroy is top of the pile. 4 majors, 3 WGCs, players championship, about 25 career wins, over 100 weeks at world no 1. Another major would put him beyond question for me. Koepka - possibly, but outside of the majors he doesn't fit the criteria at all. Same age as McIlroy and equal to him on one measure, but other than that inferior. Els - possibly. 4 majors, heaps of wins, heaps of close calls. I'm leaning towards yes. Singh, Harrington, Speith - pains me to say it for Padraig, but he's just not on the level of the others. Same for VJ I reckon and Speith I reckon, but Speith has lots of time left.
Rikand wrote: » I suppose it all depends how far back you want to go. very very difficult to compare across the eras.
GreeBo wrote: » I debated Harrington alright, but wondered was I guilty of green tinted glasses! Agree on the last 3, there is just something about Spieth that screams of "luck" to me, largely based on holing 30 foot putts!
Happy4all wrote: » Oh, and deleting Monty
Russman wrote: » Its a really fun discussion and nice distraction from the sh1te in the world right now. When you think about how many players in the last 20 years alone who were supposed to become great or had the potential to, Sergio, Adam Scott, Rose, Michael Campbell, Westwood, Donald, Casey, Kaymer (now there's one who really could have been and maybe with 2 Majors and a Players, is) etc., you realise just how good the guys who are in the discussion actually are/were. The guys who didn't make it have all had amazing careers and aren't even close. What a game !
GreeBo wrote: » You dont think 10 years of dominance makes you "great"?
GreeBo wrote: » Duval would be another interesting one, is he great? He went toe to toe with Tiger and was #1 for a period when really no one else could get a look in.
GreeBo wrote: » You dont think 10 years of dominance makes you "great"? Good but not great. Major choker.
Happy4all wrote: » Major choker.
The_Kew_Tour wrote: » Billy Casper has to be up there
In his prime Casper was overshadowed by Palmer, Nicklaus and Gary Player, who were marketed as The Big Three. But from 1964 to 1970, Casper won 27 U.S. events, six more than Palmer and Player combined, and two more than Nicklaus.
Mantis Toboggan wrote: » Ye can't have Monty in there and not have McIlroy. Monty was a good player but nowhere near a great.
GreeBo wrote: » McIlroy has never dominated like Monty did though, he has great patches, like DJ has at the moment, but nothing near Monty's stretch.
GreeBo wrote: » If Koepka gets another one then he has to be included too imo, he targets the majors so wont have as many "other" wins.