Y.E. Yang stuns Tiger Woods at PGA Championship
- Share via
CHASKA, MINN. — Entering the final round at Hazeltine National, Tiger Woods held a two-shot lead over Y.E. Yang:
When the final book on Tiger Woods is written, these two names will need to be highlighted: Ed Fiori, Y.E. Yang.
Not Sergio Garcia. Not Phil Mickelson. Not Ernie Els. At least not yet.
Fiori came from behind to beat Woods on the final day at the 1996 Quad City Classic, and Yang did the unthinkable Sunday, overtaking Woods in the final round of a major, the PGA Championship.
Wearing all white, the ghost-like figure shot a two-under-par 70 to become the first player from Asia to win a men’s major and the first to beat Woods after he had a 54-hole lead in a major. Woods had been 14 for 14 as a closer in majors.
Consider this: Yang started the day as a 20-1 underdog, according to an online sports wagering site. Woods was a 2-9 favorite, roughly the same as Secretariat in his prime against your pet cocker spaniel.
“You never know in life,” Yang said through his interpreter, Ryan Park.
No, you don’t. Woods led or was tied atop the leaderboard until the 14th hole, a drivable par four of 301 yards. Yang knocked in his eagle chip from some 80 feet to take the lead.
He never relinquished it. Woods put himself in position to make birdies at Hazeltine National but couldn’t buy one on the greens.
He spent much of the round muttering to himself in frustration. He had only three one-putts.
“I made absolutely nothing,” he said. “I had a terrible day on the greens. . . . I hit the ball great off the tee, hit my irons well. I did everything I needed to do except get the ball in the hole.”
In shooting a three-over 75, Woods made just two birdies. He didn’t really crack a smile until he graciously congratulated Yang on the 18th green.
“Y.E. hit it great all day,” Woods said. “It was a fun battle.”
The tournament was still in doubt until Yang’s three-hybrid approach on 18.
With 210 yards to the pin from the first cut of rough, he fired at the flag, and his ball settled eight feet from the cup.
Woods, trailing by one, could have chipped in for a birdie that would have forced Yang to make his putt.
Yang, the 37-year-old native of South Korea, doesn’t speak much English. But despite a limited vocabulary, his politeness comes across.
Asked in English to describe his emotions at that moment, he replied: “I think: ‘Tiger, miss the chip-in, please.’ ”
Maybe even pretty please.
Woods did miss, and Yang knocked home the birdie for an eventual three-shot victory.
“He’s a world-class player and he had nothing to lose,” said his caddie, A.J. Montecinos. “He said: ‘I’m not nervous.’ ”
Montecinos, 35, who played for Jackson State and first caddied for Yang at Q-school in 2007, said his boss is a delight.
“He’s very low-key and easy to get to know,” Montecinos said. “When the general public gets to know him, they will fall in love with him. He’s got a heart as big as this place.”
Yang didn’t take up the game in earnest until he was 19. Since 2002, he has won in Korea, Japan and China, and claimed his first PGA Tour title in March at the Honda Classic in Florida.
And now, the man who entered the PGA Championship ranked 110th in the world is a major winner.
“It just means the world right now,” Yang said through his interpreter. “It hasn’t really sunk in, but I do know the significance of it.”
--
--
(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX)
PGAwinners
2009: Y.E. Yang
2008: P. Harrington
2007: Tiger Woods
2006: Tiger Woods
2005: Phil Mickelson
2004: Vijay Singh
2003: Shaun Micheel
2002: Rich Beem
2001: David Toms
2000: Tiger Woods
1999: Tiger Woods
1998: Vijay Singh
1997: Davis Love III
1996: Mark Brooks
1995: Steve Elkington
1994: Nick Price
1993: Paul Azinger
1992: Nick Price
1991: John Daly
1990: Wayne Grady
1989: Payne Stewart
1988: Jeff Sluman
1987: Larry Nelson
1986: Bob Tway
1985: Hubert Green
1984: Lee Trevino
1983: Hal Sutton
1982: Raymond Floyd
1981: Larry Nelson
1980: Jack Nicklaus
1979: David Graham
1978: John Mahaffey
1977: Lanny Wadkins
1976: Dave Stockton
1975: Jack Nicklaus
1974: Lee Trevino
1973: Jack Nicklaus
1972: Gary Player
1971: Jack Nicklaus
1970: Dave Stockton
1969: Raymond Floyd
1968: Julius Boros
1967: Don January
1966: Al Geiberger
1965: Dave Marr
1964: Bobby Nichols
1963 : Jack Nicklaus
1962: Gary Player
1961: Jerry Barber
1960: Jay Hebert
1959: Bob Rosburg
1958: Dow Finsterwald
1957: Lionel Hebert
1956: Jack Burke Jr.
1955: Doug Ford
1954: Chick Harbert
1953: Walter Burkemo
1952: Jim Turnesa
1951: Sam Snead
1950: C. Harper
1949: Sam Snead
1948: Ben Hogan
1947: Jim Ferrier
1946: Ben Hogan
1945: Byron Nelson
1944: Bob Hamilton
1943: None (WWII)
1942: Sam Snead
1941: Vic Ghezzi
1940: Byron Nelson
1939: Henry Picard
1938: Paul Runyan
1937: Denny Shute
1936: Denny Shute
1935: Johnny Revolta
1934: Paul Runyan
1933: Gene Sarazen
1932: Olin Dutra
1931: Tom Creavy
1930: Tommy Armour
1929: Leo Diegel
1928: Leo Diegel
1927: Walter Hagen
1926: Walter Hagen
1925: Walter Hagen
1924: Walter Hagen
1923: Gene Sarazen
1922: Gene Sarazen
1921: Walter Hagen
1920: Jock Hutchison
1919: J.M. Barnes
1917-18: None (WWI)
1916: J.M. Barnes
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.