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But the more he learned about golf, the more his horizons expanded. He started playing tournaments in Korea, then moved to the Japan Golf Tour. He's played on the PGA Tour the last three years, going through qualifying school in 2007 and 2008 before winning at the Honda Classic earlier this year.
"My life has been sort of very slow, actually," Yang said. "And I've always tried to take it a step at a time. I didn't really look and envision myself 10 years, two decades away."
Even if he had, odds are he wouldn't have seen a player as poised, unflappable and determined as he was Sunday.
Though Yang describes himself as "still more of the lower-than-average PGA Tour players," he admitted that he wanted to play with Woods. When they were at tournaments together, he'd sit in the clubhouse, watch Woods play and try to envision strategies he'd use to beat him.
But daydreaming is one thing. A Who's Who of golf -- Phil Mickelson, Ernie Els, David Duval, Sergio Garcia -- has tried to beat Woods on the final day of a major and failed. Usually spectacularly.
Not Yang.
"The odds are against me. Nobody's going to be really disappointed that I lose," he said. "So I really had nothing much at stake, and that's how I played it."
He was aggressive all day, making the two biggest shots -- his chip on 14 and his approach on 18 -- when he needed to. He was calm, never once getting caught up in the circus that is Tiger Woods in the last group on the final day of a major. Dozens of cameras track Woods' every move, the galleries are massive and golf etiquette is the last thing fans are worried about as they rush to see the next shot. Yang even had some fun with it, smiling and waving at a TV camera as he crossed the bridge at the turn, and giving a Woods-like fist pump when he made that spectacular chip on 14.
And when it was all over, he hoisted his golf bag over his head -- shades of the bodybuilder he once wanted to be.
"I guess the fearlessness comes from the fact that I know I'm doing my dream job," Yang said. "Every day I'm living my dream."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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