1. I think Hogan's swing repeated like almost no one else's. If we had our hypothetical Hogan's and Tiger's each hit 100 balls with 3 wood, 3 iron, 5 iron, 7 iron, and 9 iron, I think Hogan would beat Tiger in hitting it consistently closer to the pin.
2. But the worshipping of Hogan's consistent and repetitive swing seems to miss the point Kevin made, and that I would repeat: Tiger has hit NUMEROUS shots in his career that at that time he attempted them 99% of all those watching him try those shots would have said they were IMPOSSIBLE. Tiger has done things with a club that no one else even thought of.
Case in point: final round of the Masters this year, the shorter par 3 on the front. The pin was front left and you COULD NOT get below the hole. No one did it all day. Then Tiger came up to it hit this HUGE hooking 9 iron that started WAY right, came swooping back, landed within a 5 foot spot of a hump on the front right of the green and ran all the way down to 5 feet below the hole. He made birdie. No one else even THOUGHT of the shot, and Tiger pulled it off.
3. There have been a LOT of great swings. Snead, Nelson, Nicklaus, Trevino, Watson. It's not like Hogan is the only player in history who ever figured out how to stripe it. I like learning from Hogan's swing. But I also like learning from others. In terms of "great swings" there are a lot of models out there.
In terms of great players....well, I never saw Hogan play, but Tiger took the game of golf to a level I couldn't even imagine before watching him play.