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Yang Joins The Pantheon of Sporting Upsets & Changes Golf Forever

Down goes Frazier.  18-1.  The '69 New York Mets.  The miracle on ice at Lake Placid.  Hell freezing at Hazeltine.

This is not Ed Fiori at the Quad Cities.  Rocco at Torrey certainly falls short.  Not even Rich Beem, on the same course seven years prior, can touch the significance of this PGA Championship.

YE Yang joined the pantheon of all-time great sporting upsets on Sunday by managing to shoot 70 in the final round of the PGA Championship to best Tiger Woods by three strokes.  He became the first man to unseat Woods when the world number one held a share of the 54 hole lead in a major championship.

With the accomplishment, Yang officially gives Asia a seat at the United Nations of golf champions.  Asia was the only continent with more people living on it than penguins that had not produced a major champion.  Every other continent had done it already.  Even if you discount South African champions as not really ethnic Africans, they count.  South America can thank Argentinian Robert DeVicenzo for getting them on the board.  Angel Cabrera was more recent, but second  - interestingly enough by also beating Woods at the 2007 US Open at Oakmont.  Now, Yang will be a hero for the rest of his life for what he won on Sunday.

Golf is exploding in mainland Asia, finally catching up to the golf bug that Japan caught decades prior.  China is reporting that participation in golf is growing by nearly 50 percent per year.  Courses are being constructed all over the continent.  The Champions Tour is hosting its first tournament in South Korea next year.

By virtue of his win, Yang intensified all of that momentum and enthusiasm for the game by tenfold.  Yang will be to Asia what Tiger Woods was to a generation of young people in the United States.  He is a champion to emulate.  He was the man who stood up to the best in the world, beat him, and smiled at the camera while doing it.  It was fun and endearing, while simultaneously courageous and clutch.  Yang is a tremendous ambassador and representation of what Asian golf is and can be.

In the week that the International Golf Federation announced that the IOC is recommending golf to be included into the 2016 Olympics, Yang is proof positive of the power of the event.  Despite flaws in the proposed Olympic golf tournament format and qualifying criteria, this victory gives credence to the possibilities of the sport in the Olympic games.  It no longer takes an imagination to conjure a defeat of this kind of magnitude.  It happened on Sunday.

Not only does the Yang victory help perception of golf in the Olympics, but it also helps the perception of Asian professional golf.  The Asian Tour has been steadily growing in recent years, but largely due to a symbiotic relationship with the European Tour.  Co-sanctioning of events has boosted the profile of Asian Tour events by bringing in higher ranked players with paid appearances to mow down the best that Asia has to offer. 

Though the talent level has been growing in Asia with names like Jeev Milkha Singh, Prayad Marksaeng, and Thongchai Jaidee, there had not been a validation of that growth.  Yang represents that and confirms that Asian professional golf is a legitimate threat in major championships.  They can no longer be ignored or patronized with invites to participate. 

The Masters invited Ryo Ishikawa to compete in the tournament this year because of his youth, clear talent, and - most importantly - the potential benefit to their brand if Japan's emerging superstar could pan out at Augusta National.  Now, with Yang as a confirmed major victor, that kind of transparent business-based invite is unnecessary.  In time, Ishikawa will certainly hoist a major trophy of his own, but until then, golf's major championships have a legitimate and proven champion from Asia.

The elevation of this victory is not intended to diminish what players like Se Ri Pak, Eun Hee Ji, and Ji Yai Shin - among many others - have accomplished in women's golf and on the LPGA Tour.  Those victories were and are very significant in fueling the growing enthusiasm for the game in Asia.  Now, though, those female champions have a male counterpart.  Their counterpart took down the greatest golfer still playing.

And the victory was not a squeaker.  It was decisive.  A three shot win is a practical blowout in a major championship.  Yang was not conservative in his approach.  He went for broke, with nothing to lose.  He really had nothing to lose.  Perhaps, though, it dawned on him somewhere on that back nine how much he could gain for himself and the sport were he to do what was previously considered impossible.  Yang even birdied the final hole to serve as an exclamation point of the win. 

The exclamation point was not just for this tournament, though.  His final putt will be an enduring image in golf history - and an incredible thorn in the side of the career of Tiger Woods.

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Good for Yang

I was on the edge of my seat all day long and leaped out of it for a moment when Yang chipped in for eagle on 14. This tournament would have been different if Tiger had made some putts, but he seemed befuddled by the windy conditions and the pin placements all day long. His second shot on #18 is the best wood shot I’ve ever seen and put an exclamation point on this victory.

Yang has given a template to beat Tiger that Bob May and Rocco Mediate came close to emulating years before: stay steady, play your own game, and be aggressive. Players that have succeeded against Tiger are those that play as if they have nothing to lose and Yang was no different.

Finally, I thought it was disrespectful how some fans on the 18th hole weren’t applauding Yang for his victory. They may have been rooting for Woods, but you can at least give some appreciation to the man who put his heart out there all day long and walked out with a PGA Championship.

Been a Reds fan since 1996 and am desperate for a playoff run.

by Britain United on Aug 16, 2009 10:07 PM EDT reply actions  

+1

Competition is a good thing. I loved how Yang was smiling at the camera during those last few holes played. Very few American players would have been able to do that under those circumstances. He is a very mentally tough player.

by TheQ on Aug 16, 2009 10:32 PM EDT up reply actions  

YE Yang - His second win over Tiger Woods

I am very happy to see YE Yang win the PGA Championship and sorry Tiger Woods lost.

They’ve been head to head before. In 2006, at the HSBC Champions, Yang beat Woods. Woods came in second. It was a heated battle.

But we tend to look at our little world, the United States, as the center of the universe and therefore anything that happens outside the center, doesn’t really count as much.

Yang was described all day as an “unknown”. He’s not an unknown, not where I live. I live in the United States in the middle of the Pacific Ocean where we see a lot more talented players coming from Asia to play here before taking the leap to the US mainland. It’s a long expensive flight.

Ryo Ishikawa was playing in Hawaii and winning in Japan before he was embraced by the golf paparazzi in the U.S.

I was criticized today for saying Yang won the Major and Woods lost it on the greens. Like I was vile for trying to take something away from Yang, belittling his victory. That’s how little that someone knows me.

Yang played his game. He’s powerful and determined. He’s beat Tiger before. Beat him on an exquisite golf course in China designed by one of our best architects.

I’ve been talking about the importance of golf becoming a global game before this industry realized it was in trouble and needed to think globally.
I was the one who posed, how did the reporters who heard it, put it – “The China question” – to Jack Nicklaus before getting golf back in the Olympics became the mission.

You want to get upset about people analyzing the outcome, going over the game of the two players in the final round who were battling for the victory? Maybe you should be in the media room a bit more often when players dissect their own game. It’s par for the course.

A thorn in Tigers side? No, just a loss after two victories in a row. I don’t think he’ll be “damaged goods” after this.

Hooray for YE Yang.

by TheGolfClub on Aug 16, 2009 10:40 PM EDT reply actions  

anybody else watch on PGA.com ? At 13, Brian Katrek was standing next to some arrogant, cliche filled “journalist” looking at Tiger’s potential birdie putt and Yang in the bunker. He couldn’t just wait to see what happened, he had to say, “and now it starts” – just assuming that Tiger would knock down the putt and bury Yang. It never crossed his mind that Tiger would miss and Yang would make par.

It was a fantastic final round – not perfect – and in some REALLY tough conditions – wet and windy just aren’t easy.

I noticed that there wasn’t the usual extended, huge roar for the winner – but Yang holed his putt before Tiger was finished, so the gallery had to pipe down to let him putt out. I’m sure there was a bit of shock that someone had actually beaten Tiger Woods in a major – but they couldn’t just let loose. Those fans had been very fair in their cheers for both players all day.

GREAT win for Yang !

"this ball will fit in that fairway"

by courtgolf on Aug 16, 2009 10:42 PM EDT reply actions  

A friend of mine argued that Tiger should have just putted out after he missed the chip shot since Yang wasn’t going to three putt from his spot, and I guess I have to agree a little bit. That probably did play a role in the roar not being as loud on 18 as it was on 14. However, I can see where Tiger would hold off and see what exactly Yang’s par putt would look like if he missed.

Been a Reds fan since 1996 and am desperate for a playoff run.

by Britain United on Aug 16, 2009 11:06 PM EDT up reply actions  

Tiger’s chip didn’t exactly finish in tap in distance – Yang moved in pretty quickly to start his routine…like he does in most tournaments. Tiger probably could have stopped him and putted out, but I think he did the right thing by letting Yang go ahead – not interrupting Yang’s nervous energy.

"this ball will fit in that fairway"

by courtgolf on Aug 16, 2009 11:25 PM EDT up reply actions  

Ryan you're forgetting

Roberto DeVicenzo. He not Cabrera was the first South American to win a major.

by Bill Jempty on Aug 17, 2009 8:29 AM EDT reply actions  

Bill, you’re right – my haste got me there by not making that clear. Just wanted to draw the Woods connection for Pato as well.

Email me any comments or questions at ryan@thegolfnewsnet.com.

by Ryan Ballengee on Aug 17, 2009 8:35 AM EDT up reply actions  

I know you're not saying this, but

Calling South Africans (and Zimbabweans) of European descent “not really ethnic Africans” is a bit of a stretch. You could just as well claim any American without Native American heritage to be “not really North American.” If you were to do so, you could just as well claim that Tiger and Vijay’s South Asian heritage means Yang is one of a number of Asians to win a major this decade.

by Cairo on Aug 17, 2009 3:39 PM EDT reply actions  

You’re catching my drift. Didn’t want to get too political in talking about apartheid, etc, but also didn’t want to give a pass on white men who grew up in Africa (Nick Price inclusive) winning major championships.

Email me any comments or questions at ryan@thegolfnewsnet.com.

by Ryan Ballengee on Aug 17, 2009 3:43 PM EDT up reply actions  

isn’t INDIGENOUS the word you were thinking about ? not ethnic ?

"this ball will fit in that fairway"

by courtgolf on Aug 17, 2009 4:52 PM EDT up reply actions  

You can use either. Ethnic is used a lot in European situations – think Albania.

Email me any comments or questions at ryan@thegolfnewsnet.com.

by Ryan Ballengee on Aug 17, 2009 11:09 PM EDT up reply actions  

Ethnic and Indigenous don’t mean the same thing.

ah – Albania – two of the funniest sit-com moments…

Cheers – Coach is trying to help Sam study for a geography test and teaches him how to remember these small countries…“Al-ba-ni-a…Al-ba-ni-a…you border on…the..A-dri-atic…”

The Simpsons – Homer is talking to the head of the school board about taking in an exchange student…
School board guy – "He’s Ablanian.’
Homer – “You mean he’s all white with little pink eyes ?”
(my brother and I almost got thrown out of a local pub after falling off our stools from laughing at that one)

"this ball will fit in that fairway"

by courtgolf on Aug 18, 2009 9:57 AM EDT up reply actions  

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