I think it comes down to the age old debate...
shack said:
I play about 70 rounds a year (I figured "GOD" would know better than to make stupid assumptions) and I know it's difficult to do well. It's very demanding and a high level of skill is needed. Having athletic abilities helps one to play at a higher level, however there is no way in the world "athletes" like Tim Herron, Craig Stadler, Phil Mickelson, who compete at the highest level of their sport could play at the highest levels of others such as NHL hockey or be in the decathlon or to be a world class soccer player to name a few. Golf requires skill and being athletic helps but you do NOT have to be an athlete to be a good golfer. You HAVE to be athletic to play many other sports.
Go ahead and use your brain and discover what it's like.
...of the definition of "athleteic" versus "talented".
I have known people who were very athletic, and in fantasic shape (aerobic conditioning, low body fat %) who could not have competed on the world stage at ANY sport.
And, as you clearly pointed out, there are people who are probably less fit that then average joe (I'll trade you Phil Mickelson for John Daly) but clearly are amongst the best in the world (top 200?) at what they do.
And then of course there is that third element - skill.
My own personal definition...not necessarily right...has always been that things like hand - eye coordination, timing, imagination, touch...are "talent". These things stay with you regardless of your physical condition (assuming you are still healthy). Steve Kerr could probably still drain 3 pointers from heaven today, years after leaving the NBA because he has a "talent" for it...he could shoot and hit shots until his legs gave out from exhaustion. What he would NOT be able to do anymore is get open in an NBA game to TAKE the shot....but hand him a basketball in an empty gym and it is swish all day...
"Athletic" is a combination of physical attributes that can be improved with training (speed, strength, agility, aerobic capacity), but is also influenced greatly by genetics, as you a limited at the high end by what God gave you. Hence, even if someone is in supreme shape, and perhaps even the best athlete at his school, he still may not be world class....he doesn't have that last 1%.
Then there is "skill"...skill is an reflection of what you are able to execute based on your own personal combination of "talent" and "athletism", as honed through practice. Hitting a golf shot or a jump shot is a skill...and you can come to do it well with practice...but to do it on a world class level you have to posses talent...all the practice in the world will not get you there. At the same time...if there is no practice you will not execute well either, no matter how talented you are.
Golf is a game of skill that relies primarily on talent as refined by practice. I could practice just as much and as hard as Vijay Singh...I will still never be good enough to join the tour. On the other hand, I suspect Vijay could have spent as much time as I did in my youth in a gym and on a practice field, and still never make the cut of a D-I NCAA football team.
Tiger is a unique and special player because he combines all of these elements at a very high level, along with a tremendous drive and mental game. It is universally agreed that he is the most talented man in golf...the question is only by how much (Phil is also very, very gifted). However, it is also universally agreed that he is one of the hardest working guys in golf, second perhaps to only Vijay. Lastly, in addition to without question being the most fit man in golf, he is also perhaps golfs best athlete. Michael Jordan responded to a comment that Tiger could play in the NBA by saying that was unlikely...but he probably could have played D-I NCAA basketball as a point guard at a non elite school and done well had he focused on basketball versus golf. There might not be a single other guy on the tour who can say that...
The result of this amazing mixure...the best player in the world at his game, and perhaps the best player in the world at ANY game. But that still doesn't make him the best "athlete", by the definition I think you are using.