Yang stuns Tiger to become 1st Asian to win major
CHASKA, Minn. (AP)—Knowing his last remaining challenger was about to make birdie, he chipped in from 60 feet for an eagle. The crowd roared, and he responded with a scream and a fist pump.
Got to be Tiger Woods wrapping up another major.
No, not this time.
Y.E. Yang, a South Korean who didn’t take up the game until he was 19, became the first Asian player to win a major championship Sunday. And he took down Woods in the PGA Championship to do it.
“I usually go for broke,” Yang said through an interpreter. “The odds are against me. Nobody’s going to be really disappointed that I lose. So I really had nothing much at stake, and that’s how I played it.”
Beating Woods in a regular tournament would be a big enough shocker for a 37-year-old player who was in PGA Tour qualifying school just nine months ago. That he did it in a major is an upset so big it sent shock waves around the world.
Woods was 14-0 when he was atop the leaderboard going into the final round of a major. He had never lost any tournament on American soil when leading by more than one shot.
Yang’s stunning victory might turn out to be a watershed for the Asian-born men’s game, too, much the way Se Ri Pak was for women. Since she won the LPGA Championship and U.S. Women’s Open in 1998, seven South Korean women have combined to win 11 majors.
Yang and K.J. Choi are the only PGA Tour players who learned golf in South Korea before coming to America.
“That really created a huge boom in Korea golf-wise, where everybody started picking up clubs instead of tennis rackets and baseball bats,” Yang said. “I hope this win would be, if not as significant, something quite parallel to an impact both to golf in Korea as well as golf in Asia so that all the young golfers, Korean and Asian, would build their dreams and expand their horizons.”
If the reaction back in South Korea is any guide, they will. People woke up before dawn to watch the final round, including president Lee Myung-bak, who later called Yang to offer his congratulations. Driving ranges were filled before work Monday morning.
At the Hoban Korean Restaurant near Hazeltine, where Yang ate all week, the owners not only kept the restaurant open Sunday night, they and the entire staff were waiting outside, applauding Yang as he arrived.
“You enhanced our people’s morale by winning the major title for the first time as an Asian,” Lee told Yang, according to Lee’s office.
And Yang gave hope to every other golfer, showing them that not only can Woods be beaten, but how to do it.
Knowing Woods was on the verge of a birdie on 14, Yang chipped in from 60 feet for eagle to take the lead. With Woods only a stroke behind and in the fairway on 18, he made an even more spectacular shot. Despite a tree blocking his view of the flag, Yang’s 3-iron hybrid cleared a bunker and settled 12 feet away.
He made the final birdie to close with a 2-under 70, giving him a three-shot victory when Woods missed yet another short par putt.
“I played well enough to win the championship. I did not putt well enough to win the championship,” said Woods, whose 75 was his worst score ever in the final round of the major when he was in the last group.
“I didn’t get it done on the greens, and consequently, I didn’t win the golf tournament.”
Though Yang won the Honda Classic in March, he was best known for holding off Woods at the HSBC Champions in China three years ago. But they weren’t paired together then.
And it wasn’t a major.
Asian-born players had come close in the majors before. Liang-Huan Lu of Taiwan finished one shot behind Lee Trevino at the 1971 British Open, and T.C. Chen’s famous two-chip gaffe cost him a chance at the 1985 U.S. Open, where he was runner-up to Andy North.
But trailing by two shots going into the final round at Hazeltine National, Yang was simply unflappable.
He had envisioned playing Woods so many times, imagined the strategies he’d used, that he felt no fear. He caught Woods at the turn and was tied with five holes to play when he chipped in for that eagle on the 14th. With the tees again moved forward to 301 yards, Yang came up just short. He watched Woods play a good bunker shot to 8 feet, then knocked in his chip.
He three-putted for a bogey on the 17th, and it looked as if the nerves might finally be kicking in—just in time for Woods to stage yet another dramatic comeback.
Instead, Yang delivered his two most important shots for the upset.
“He went out there and executed his game plan,” Woods said. “He was doing exactly what you have to do, especially in these conditions. I think he played beautifully.”
After a long and tearful embrace with his wife, Young Ju Park, he walked across a bridge saluting thousands of fans who couldn’t believe what they saw. When the Wanamaker Trophy was placed next to him before his news conference, he nodded his head, as if to say, “Yep, this is pretty cool.”
Yang finished at 8-under 280 and won $1.35 million, along with a five-year exemption on the PGA Tour and the majors. He is the first player since John Daly in 1991 to win the PGA Championship after going to Q-school the previous year. He also made the International team for the Presidents Cup in October in San Francisco.
“This might be my last win as a golfer,” Yang said. “But it sure is a great day.”
Indeed, in a year of spoilers at the majors, this might have been the biggest.
Kenny Perry was poised to become the oldest Masters champion at 48 until Angel Cabrera beat him in a playoff. Phil Mickelson, reeling from news his wife had breast cancer, was on the verge of finally winning the U.S. Open until Lucas Glover outplayed him over the final few holes. And just last month, 59-year-old Tom Watson was an 8-foot par putt away from winning the British Open, only to lose in a playoff to Stewart Cink.
But whether the PGA Championship is remembered more for Yang’s victory than Woods losing a 54-hole lead for the first time in a major remains to be seen.
“I have the utmost respect for his game,” Yang said. “I don’t think he had a poor game today, but I’m just glad that he had one of those off days today.”
Off it was.
Woods struggled with his putter from the very first hole, and it likely cost him the tournament. He missed seven birdie putts from within 10 feet, including ones at No. 10 and No. 13 that could have started one of those patented Tiger waves that has swallowed up so many an opponent.
“All the other 14 major championships I’ve won, I’ve putted well for the entire week,” Woods said. “And today, that didn’t happen.”

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you re the biggest, sorriest, person I have ever encountered, in person and in print. You hate Tiger, you actually envy Tiger because he has won so much, is like by most fans except people like you, he is rich bewond what you and your family ever will be, and he is married to a beautiful wife. I bet your wife is Fat and Ugly, and you probably are also. Do you feel the hate I'm trying to convey to you by striking out. Probably not. Well I don't hate you friend, I love all people, but I feel sorry for you because you know what? "You hate yourself", that's your problem.
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1209. Posted by RALPH C Wed Aug 19 8:46pm EDT Report Abuse
I cant believe some of this crap im reading here.most of you people watch but dont see.most of you talk but dont hear.i play golf for fun with friends.i am a fan of most pro golfers,first let me say that Woods comes across as arrogant and unsportsman like at times.swearing and throwing clubs,standing in opponents line of sight,walking off greens before others finish.his is a game of intimidation,forcing his opponent to falter on Sundays.on this day Yang did not fade away as others in the past,Yang hit shot for shot with Woods and Woods cracked on this day.Woods felt the pressure and therefore could not make putts.Woods felt the pressure because Yang would not bow to his pressence,would not crumble under his intimidation.Woods did not choke,but he CRACKED. why didnt Woods putt out on the 18th? and leave the moment to the winner Yang.because Woods is poor sport.yes he will probably break the Bears record but he will NEVER be the QUALITY man JACK is.
Ralph, I agree with your assesment to a point, I don't like the way Tiger remains in his opponents peripheral vision on the greens when his opponent is putting. You don't have to be in their peripheral vision to see how the ball rolls if your putting next. Not only does he stand in the opponents peripheral vision, the way he stands he's trying to send a message, he doesn't have to be int heir peripheral with his legs crossed leaning on his putter. Pressure, he certainly felt the pressure playing with Y.E. which increased when he couldn't get the lead tee shot back from Y.E. I believe that was huge, when Y.E. got the lead tee shot he kept hitting the ball in the fairway on the par 4 & 5's, and landing it on the green on the par 3's. He was forcing Tiger keep his ball in play and in good position which Tiger was having a hard time doing. Don't get me wronmg, Tiger was hitting the ball pretty good but not good enough to get the lead tee shot back and that was causing the pressure to increase every hole down the stretch, starting with 16 and especially on 17 & 18!
I think Y.E. knew that, if he could just keep the lead tee shot and make Tiger try and match him shot for shot, he was in the drivers seat.
Tiger was a little disrespectful there at the end but did give Y.E. his dues when he was interviewed after the tournament. Tiger was hurt, he tried not to show it there at the end but he was hurt, he didn't like that streak to end, for more than 1 reason. Sure he wants that major victory record but he also wanted to keep that intimidation factor going which has made his run on the majors just a little bit easier and now it's going to get a bit more difficult and he knows that!
I don't believe he flies by Jacks major record like the media seems to think. If you listen to the so called experts, Tiger won the PGA before it was played, we could've done some work around the house rather than playing and watching the tournament and they could've had a trophy presentation Sunday night handing the trophy to Tiger! Some of the media believes Tiger will win mid 20's major tournaments, never. Those majors are hard to win and will get more difficult for Tiger as the years start to pass by. The media seems to base their estimates using the current players and the way they're playing. They don't seem to think that maybe, just maybe, someone will get on a hot streak for a year maybe 2 years like Johnny Miller did back in the 70's. They don't mention that maybe another phenom may come along in the next couple of years who could also potentially take a few majors from Tiger.
I do credit Tiger when it comes to the major records because he knows it won't be easy and when he answers that question, he states that trying to accomplish that great feat is a process and that it is a career process that will take a long time and the outcome is certainly unkown at this early stage in his career.
Tiger has what, maybe 8 months to stew on this year's 0 for 4 record in major golf tournaments before he can try and do anything about it. Could he come back and win all 4 next year, sure, it's possible but improbable!
Time to go and relax, have a good night everyone, congratulations Y.E and also to Tiger who still entertains even when he loses.........
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He finally lost..BFD..but here come the racist haters with all their talk of Jack being so this and that..when what they mean is he is white..
Yang..he will join O Moody..Ben Curtis..R Beam..J Daily..and the rest of the spares that won and are done..
I laugh..Tiger was beaten by another asian..not your white super race..racists..
LMFAO...
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I agree partly with your views on CBS. But they're not any different than NBC when it comes to covering Tiger. As a golf fan I too want to see the other golfers instead of watching the meaningless parade of TW. But unfortunately that is what a lot of people want to see. He's like a Rock Star.
On Sunday I was watching the TNT coverage prior to CBS taking over. They cut away from the golf action to show TW and his caddie (Stevie as they referred to him) drive up in the parking lot. And the number of people hanging on the rail as he walks to the practice green. That's what they go for.
The whole group of announcers (CBS & NBC) say some of the stupidist things during the Tiger TV coverage. Jim Nantz will start waxing poetic about him, that I want to put my fist through the TV. Literally, I will MUTE my TV it gets so bad. I swear they all have a hand towel to wipe the jizz off their laps, because it sounds like they're having a big ol' Circle Jerk over him.
I end up rooting against him. So Yang winning Sunday was great in many ways. It shut them up for a week.
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