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View Full Version : Tiger gets his ass kicked by nobody


derf
08-17-2009, 01:11 AM
and by nobody I mean some dude named Yang

http://golf.fanhouse.com/2009/08/16/nobody-yang-does-what-no-one-could/?icid=main|aimzones|dl1|link3|http%3A%2F%2Fgolf.fa nhouse.com%2F2009%2F08%2F16%2Fnobody-yang-does-what-no-one-could%2F

CHASKA, Minn. -- He didn't start playing golf until he was 19, and even then it wasn't on the best facilities, as golf didn't matter in South Korea. Then, he joined the Army for two years, where he was a low-level guard. And it was only after that before Y.E. Yang realized that golf had something called a touring pro.

So it's no wonder Tiger Woods didn't show him one tiny bit of respect this weekend. Truth is, Woods didn't show any golfers respect in the PGA Championship, taking a lead after two rounds and then playing ridiculously safe for two, figuring none of the tour's other players, apparently all Bozos, could ever catch him.

Truth is, the others had earned his disregard. But Yang beat him anyway.
More: Final-Round Leaderboard | Yang's Scorecard | Tiger's Scorecard
Mariotti: Yin and Yang: Woods Choked | Who Is Y.E. Yang?

Playing with Woods and, theoretically, all the crushing pressure that goes with that, Yang shot a 70 Sunday, five strokes better than Tiger for the day.

Tiger became a Kitten. Yang won the PGA Championship.

He also became the first Asian-born player to win a major. He finished off a failed year for Woods. And also, he threw a gigantic wrench into the belief system of American youth sports, which is now about turning small kids into professionals. Turns out, your kid doesn't have to have his sporting future decided by the time he's 4 years old after all.

"I sort of visualized this quite a few times," Yang, who's 37, said through an interpreter. He finished the tournament at 8-under, three strokes ahead of Woods. "Going into the final round of a major championship. I've seen a lot of players with Tiger in the final round have folded.

"I tried to visualize [over the years], tried to bring a mock strategy of how to win if I ever played against Tiger."

When it was over, Yang, who actually beat Woods once a few years ago, grabbed his golf bag with both hands, raised it over his head and pumped his arms. He walked over the bridge toward the scoring trailer, and fans underneath were chanting for him, and he raised his arms again. Yang is a wholly likable character. During the round, you would see him wave to the TV camera, as if he had never been in front of one before.

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CHASKA, MN - AUGUST 16: (L-R) Y.E. Yang of South Korea celebrates a birdie putt on the 18th green alongside Tiger Woods during the final round of the 91st PGA Championship at Hazeltine National Golf Club on August 16, 2009 in Chaska, Minnesota. (Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Y.E. Yang;Tiger Woods
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PGA Championship Photos
CHASKA, MN - AUGUST 16: (L-R) Y.E. Yang of South Korea celebrates a birdie putt on the 18th green alongside Tiger Woods during the final round of the 91st PGA Championship at Hazeltine National Golf Club on August 16, 2009 in Chaska, Minnesota. (Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Y.E. Yang;Tiger Woods
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LeBron James #23 of the Cleveland Cavaliers watches as Mo Williams #2 takes a shoe to the face by Kobe Bryant #24 of the Los Angeles Lakers after a steal in the closing seconds of the first half at The Quicken Loans Arena on February 8, 2009 in Cleveland, Ohio. (David Liam Kyle, NBAE/Getty Images)

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Brazil's Diogo (L) vies for the ball with Paraguay's Hernan Perez during their U-20 South American Championship football match in Puerto La Cruz, Venezuela on February 8, 2009.(Juan Barreto, AFP/Getty Images )

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On the 11th fairway, as he walked past, someone yelled "Make him work for it, Yang man." He looked up, smiled, nodded.

What Yang didn't notice was that whenever a fan would cheer for him, the fan's friend standing next to him would be giggling.

Everyone just assumed that Yang would fold or, more likely, Woods would take it.

Instead, Woods didn't seem to think he needed to take anything. He didn't fearlessly fire at the flags from the fairways. That's the Tiger who has thrilled everyone. This Tiger was firing safely for the middle of the greens, sometimes even laying up on par-5s.

"When you've got 640-yard par-5s, I really can't get there," Woods said. "I don't know how aggressive I can play."

Woods finishes the year without a major title, 33 years old, after major knee surgery. In his race for Jack Nicklaus' record 18 major titles, he is stuck at 14. He'll still get there.

Don't worry.

But while Woods is the world's most famous sportsman, golf still got a huge boost in the past week in its hopes of finding new turf to conquer. The old ground is starting to dry up.

First, an Olympics committee recommended that golf be included in the Games in 2016. It is only a rubber stamp from final approval.

And now Yang sent a message to Asia: "Hopefully," he said, "all young ballplayers fill their dreams and expand their horizons a little bit."

The women's tour is filled with Korean players already, though, spurred on originally by the success of Se Ri Pak, who won the U.S. Women's Open. Why haven't Korean men arrived on tour?

Yang said it was because Korean men have to serve in the military in their 20s, interrupting their golfing prime. Also, he cited bad facilities. And the Korean women, he said, feel that they are close enough to the same physical size as the U.S. women on the LPGA Tour to compete. But on the men's side, he once said, "the physical aspect, I think they just get too scared and they don't even give themselves a chance to even come and try."

That's going to change now.

"I tried to visualize ... how to win if I ever played against Tiger."
-- Y.E. Yang While everyone kept waiting for Woods to pull ahead, or just do something, anything, Yang chipped in for eagle at the 14th hole for the lead. At No. 16, he dangerously fired right of the pin, and nearly went into the water.

Gutsy? Not exactly. Nervous. He was aiming left.

When he and Woods reached No. 18, Yang led by a stroke. And he hit his second shot, over 200 yards, from the fairway to about eight feet from the hole.

Nervous luck? No, he planned that one. And it buried Woods.

And whatever comes of this, here's to hoping the biggest thing is that American psycho sports dads take note.

"I think everybody was aware of Tiger's reputation," player Padraig Harrington said, "when he was 2."

True. And Woods' success, as a kid built for golfing greatness, led to an awful lot of drooling dads forcing their kids hopelessly onto the same path. It started a dangerous movement in American youth sport. And you might notice the disgusting site of Little League children pumped up as rock stars on national TV this week.

It worked for Woods. But by the time Yang was 22, he was thinking about being a golf instructor, or maybe into golf course construction. Then someone told him about tournaments. So that's when he started dreaming. He was in his late 20s, early 30s before he started visualizing what he might do with a chance against Woods.

And look how he did.

goof2
08-17-2009, 09:26 AM
I was very impressed by Yang's performance. Pretty much everyone collapses when they play with Tiger on Sunday. Yang actually stepped his game up.

smileyman
08-17-2009, 10:29 AM
Ha! LOL! i misread the title as 'Tigger' and thought WTF?

You think Yang is good wait till you see his brother, Yin, play!

z06boy
08-17-2009, 11:18 AM
I was very impressed by Yang's performance. Pretty much everyone collapses when they play with Tiger on Sunday. Yang actually stepped his game up.

True. I only watched the 18th hole :lol: but he nailed it and Tiger didn't.

Rider
08-17-2009, 11:20 AM
Golf is for pussies.

goof2
08-17-2009, 11:36 AM
Golf is for pussies.

If you mean the pros, they may be pussies but they are very rich pussies. They are also pussies who don't finish their career half retarded due to concussions suffered while playing.

z06boy
08-17-2009, 11:38 AM
Golf is for pussies.

:lol: Well I don't think that BUT I don't golf or watch it either...it's just not for me.

I was channel surfing and saw this going on and thought who the feck is this guy and he's beating Tiger and it was the last hole so I watched.

Rider
08-17-2009, 11:48 AM
If you mean the pros, they may be pussies but they are very rich pussies. They are also pussies who don't finish their career half retarded due to concussions suffered while playing.

True and I admit I play golf once a season so I'm in that pussy group as well.

Apoc
08-17-2009, 12:39 PM
I play quite a bit of golf (30 or so rounds this year so far). Great game.

That said, this was a shock, I expected Yang to fold by the third hole, and he held on and won it. Tigers putting was horrible, but his driving was dead on, which is usually not the case. His putting usually wins tournaments for him.

But when Yang eagled the 14th hole, it was all over. Impressive win for sure. Tiger must be fuming.

Im sure the PGA purists are fuming too, a black man and an asian in the final group of the PGA championship, lol.

z06boy
08-17-2009, 12:59 PM
Im sure the PGA purists are fuming too, a black man and an asian in the final group of the PGA championship, lol.

:lol

Homeslice
08-18-2009, 04:21 AM
tiger = pwnd

Avatard
08-18-2009, 03:42 PM
Golf is for pussies.

http://www.bootsandsabers.com/images/uploads/Golf_Trophy.jpg

Apoc
08-18-2009, 10:47 PM
tiger = pwnd

Hard to call someone with 14 majors and 90 PGA tour wins, making 100 million/year, pwnd..... :skep:

is rossi 'pwnd' when he comes in second?