Date: August 17, 2009
Author: Sportal

Yang tames Tiger

South Korea&aposs YE Yang made history as he became the first man to overturn a Tiger Woods 54-hole lead in a major and claim the US PGA Championship at Hazeltine National. Yang, 37, also became the first Asian-born player to win a major and he denied the world No.1 a 15th such victory, the American having previously enjoyed a perfect record in turning 14 third-round major leads into wins. World No.110 Yang, with just one previous win in the United States to his name, landed his second in style, first overturning a two-shot lead and then eagling the par-four 14th hole to move in front before holding his nerve down the stretch to seal victory at seven-under-par with a two-under round of 70. Woods came up short by three shots, taking a 75 for second place, with Lee Westwood of England and Northern Ireland&aposs Rory McIlroy tied for third place at three-under. Robert Allenby and Brendan Jones were the leading Australasians in a share of 24th place at three-over. Geoff Ogilvy could also only manage an even-par final-round to finish at six-over with Michael Sim a further shot back. Kiwi David Smail finished tied for 67th, his four-over 76 seeing him fall to 11-over for the tournament. The catalyst for Yang&aposs victory came when he sent down a brilliant bunker shot for eagle at the par-four 14th as Woods birdied to take a one-shot lead with four to play. Woods had begun the fourth round at a rain-softened Hazeltine with a two-shot lead at eight-under over playing partner Yang and defending champion Padraig Harrington of Ireland. Yang upped the ante with a birdie at the par-five third and Woods folded at the par-three fourth, three-putting for bogey to fall into a tie with the Korean at seven-under. Yang&aposs time in the lead was short-lived as he bogeyed the fifth, while Harrington narrowly missed birdie chances at the fifth and sixth to stay tied for second at six-under. A third of an inch of rain had fallen overnight on the 7,674-yard, par-72 Minnesota course after Woods completed a third-round 71 to move closer to a record-tying fifth US PGA title. Playing conservative, low-risk golf, the world No.1 had seen his four-stroke halfway lead cut in half by Yang&aposs five-under 67 and Harrington&aposs 69. Also within reach of Woods, winner of his last two tournaments, was Glover and Sweden&aposs Henrik Stenson, a further two shots in arrears at four-under, with Denmark&aposs Soren Kjeldsen and Ernie Els of South Africa at three-under. Harrington had duelled with Woods the previous Sunday at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational until playing a disastrous 16th hole in Akron, Ohio, and the Irishman&aposs reign as PGA champion was undone in one hole seven days later with a calamity at the par-three eighth, a quintuple bogey eight having found the right-sided lake off the tee. Woods took bogey at the same hole to fall to six-under and the co-leaders made the turn with a three-shot lead over the field. The US PGA champion had come out of the final pairing for the last 13 years and Woods took control once more with a birdie at the par-five 11th, only to bogey the 12th and drop back into a share of the lead with the Korean at six-under. Then came Yang&aposs moment of magic at the 14th, Woods making birdie to stay in the hunt with four to play. There was still time for drama as Woods bogeyed the par-three 17th only for Yang to miss his par putt and the Korean went to the 72nd hole still with a one-shot lead over the world No.1. Yang stayed cool at the 18th and sent in a remarkable hybrid shot from the left fairway fringe under a tree that just missed the hole, the Korean allowing himself a fist pump. From the other side but on the fairway, Woods&apos five iron found left greenside rough. That left Woods needing yet another miracle shot to rescue but his effort ran past the hole and Yang had two putts from 10 feet to become US PGA champion. He needed just one and history was made, Woods bogeying the 18th for his 75. South Africa&aposs Ernie Els (74), Stenson (75), Germany&aposs Martin Kaymer (73) and Denmark&aposs Soren Kjeldsen (74) tied for sixth place at two-under, while Harrington closed with a 78 to tie for 10th with Americans Dustin Johnson (70), Zach Johnson (71) and John Merrick (70) as well as Northern Irishman Graeme McDowell (72) and Italy&aposs Francesco Molinari (72), making it eight Europeans in the final top 10.