Every single possible EV combination had less than a 50% chance of happening; not just that, but less of a chance than 332 for Obama. So held against that standard, every single possible result would have been deemed a failure. Silver wasn't saying 332 vs. all other possibilities. He was assigning a likelihood to each one.
I've pointed this out as well (especially regarding Wang). Wang's prediction wasn't a failure by any means. Sure, he had predicted 303 as the most likely outcome, but he had 332 as the second most likely outcome, and the difference between them wasn't large. In fact, it came down pretty much totally to Florida. Wang had Romney's chance of winning Fla at 60%, so that meant that, between the options of 303 and 332, he had 303 about 60% of the time and 332 40%. In contrast, Silver had them flipped, because he had the Florida probability flipped. But again, the relative chance of 332 vs 303 just reflected the probability of Obama winning Florida.
No one who understands this thinks there is any real difference between a prediction of 20% chance of 332 and a 17% chance of 303, which is what Silver had. Both are perfectly reasonable. He even had 350ish as possible (add NC), which makes perfect sense considering NC was the one he was most likely to get wrong.
So yeah, Silver nailed it, but so did Wang. The most important lesson is NOT about the details of the statistical approaches, whether it is Bayesian or whatever, but that it is possible to get reliable insight from the polls.
However, this goes right back to Silver's past with Baseball Prospectus, and, in fact, can be traced back to Bill James. It's the exact type of thing that James originated, and Silver and the BP crew advanced, when he claimed that minor league baseball stats, when properly taken into context (in particular, league, park, age), are just as reliable as major league stats.
What Silver and Wang are doing is the same thing - polls, when properly taken into context, are reliable indicators of voting results.
Folks familiar with the history of Sabremetrics are not all surprised by this. We've seen it all before. Heck, I had a lot of interactions with some of the Baseball Prospectus guys (I don't remember Nate being involved, though) long before they ever started doing BP, and was familiar with their work. I knew they were working on projection models at the time, and they absolutely got a ton of crap from people who wouldn't believe it, just like what is happening now.