Vijay can’t match Tiger of 2000

Vijay Singh has one month to put the final touches on what already is a masterpiece.

He won for the eighth time this year at the 84 Lumber Classic, setting the single-season earnings record with more than $9.4 million. Singh has at least three tournaments left, so the 10-10 mark — 10 victories, $10 million — is in range. And as a sign that the 41-year-old Fijian is only getting stronger, he has won five of his last six starts.

Clearly, comparisons with Tiger Woods are inevitable. As long as the year is 1999 — not 2000.

Five years ago, Woods launched a spectacular finish to the season by winning the PGA Championship at Medinah. He became No. 1 in the world, shattered the single-season money record and wound up with eight tour victories, winning five of his last six starts.

Singh is every bit as good as that.

But no one stacks up against Woods in 2000, the modern standard of greatness.

“Tiger won three majors in 2000,” Singh said. “You can’t beat three majors. It’s so much more difficult to win major events than normal tournaments. I’m just going to try to enjoy my own good season.”

Indeed, Singh should take a bow.

He joins Woods (1999, 2000), Johnny Miller (1974) and Arnold Palmer (1960, 1962) as the only players since 1960 to have won at least eight PGA Tour events in one year. If he were to run the table and finish with 11 victories, that would tie for third all-time behind Byron Nelson (18 in 1945) and Ben Hogan (13 in 1946). Sam Snead also won 11 in 1950.

Still, Singh’s phenomenal season only illustrates how dominant Woods was in 2000, when he won nine times, captured the final three majors and set or tied 27 records.

“To me, that’s still the best year anybody ever had,” Stewart Cink said. “Unfortunately for Vijay, he doesn’t have any more major tournaments this year.”

Everyone remembers the majors, but that was only a part of what made Woods’ 2000 the Mona Lisa of golf. And that’s why trying to match Singh in 2004 against Woods in 2000 is like putting the Americans against Europe in the Ryder Cup.

It’s no contest.

Majors: Singh won his only major, the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits, when Justin Leonard bogeyed the last two holes in regulation and Singh won the three-hole playoff by making his only birdie of the day.

Woods won the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach by a record 15 shots. He completed the career Grand Slam at St. Andrews by winning the British Open by eight shots. He won the PGA Championship in a playoff over Bob May after both shot a bogey-free 31 on the back nine at Valhalla.

Victories: Woods doesn’t play as often as Singh, but he usually plays only the tournaments that attract the strongest fields. All but one of his victories in 2000 included at least seven of the top 10 players on the PGA Tour money list that season, the exception coming at the Canadian Open. He won nine of the 20 tournaments he played.

Unless he changes his schedule, Singh will have played 29 times in 2004. He beat Woods head-to-head in Boston to replace him at No. 1 in the world, and he also held off Woods at the Buick Open. But three of Singh’s victories — 84 Lumber, Houston Open, New Orleans — included only one other player from the top five in the world ranking.

Singh’s season is worth celebrating. But for there to be any comparisons with Woods, he will have to come up with something truly special next year.