No, this is not a "high quality" answer. The length is not the problem per se; it is the fact that it contains no rationale and no explanation of how to do what it proposes.
It barely meets the minimum bar for "an answer". As such, although it would be inappropriate to flag it for deletion, it is badly in need of editing. Downvoting would also be a reasonable choice. Attempting to do either of these would have caused you to fail the audit, which is unexpected and wrong.
It was selected as an audit because 11 people found the answer helpful, but that is not always the best metric. Sometimes, things get upvoted that aren't exactly gems. These upvotes all came in shortly after the answer was posted, within a 48-hour period. It has not had any upvotes after that initial flurry of activity, suggesting that this answer is not one of those that is enduringly useful to Google traffic. (In fact, it looks like the entire question is about a highly-localized case of service disruption, and its continued presence serves little to no value whatsoever. The question is equally as low-quality as its top answer.)
Note that you are not the first person to fail an audit centered around this answer. Hamza Zafeer and ρяσѕρєя K were also tripped up here.
When you fail an obviously incorrect audit, you should return to the post and do what you would normally have done in the review queue, including editing and/or voting.