Tiger is human after all
by Golf guest 17/08/2009, 14:07
The scene seemed surreal, mostly because somehow we never expected to see it. Tiger Woods had been so great for so long that the idea of anyone - much less the late-blooming son of South Korean vegetable farmers - coming from behind to beat him when it really mattered bordered on preposterous.
This really did come from nowhere, delivered by a relative
nobody who refused to wilt like so many others had before him. The
world No 1 was stunned, but so too was the massive gallery at
Hazeltine National in Chaska, Minnesota. Fans were there for a coronation only to find
out someone had not only stolen the champagne but the cake, too.
Woods stood on the 18th green, staring intently at his golf
ball, as if he were trying to read it for clues as to what went so
terribly wrong. YE Yang's final putt made official what he
already knew. Losing was something that happened to the other guy,
not him, and he would still suffer the added indignity of having to
putt out while Yang traded high-fives with his caddie.
He missed, as he had so many times on this long Minnesota day.
No matter, because by now the secret was already out.
Tiger Woods is human after all.
Woods's remarkable streak of winning 14 major championships while
leading going into the final round is over, undone by a balky
putter and a player who not only dared to stand up to him but
delivered a final blow so stunning it will live on in golf lore.
A
lot of players had the game to beat Woods on Sunday in a major, but
Yang was the only one with the mental toughness to believe it could
actually be done.
He may have been among the most improbable of challengers, but
they are the kind who always seemed to give Woods the most trouble.
Bob May nearly stole a PGA Championship from him in Kentucky, and
Rocco Mediate had him beat on the California coast until Woods sank
a miracle putt on the final hole at the US Open last year,
forcing a playoff which Woods won.
Like Yang, they played as though they had nothing to lose
because they didn't. The others did, and it was usually the fear of
being humiliated by Woods that did them in.
Not any more. The red shirt on Sunday will now come with a
target.
On a breezy day outside Minneapolis, the Tiger mystique was
shattered.
Yang wasn't about to claim credit for that, just as he wasn't
going to claim credit for making the biggest statement ever by an
Asian player in major championship golf. But he did spend countless
hours visualising what he would do if he ever got the chance to
play against Woods. And when he did, Woods seemed so surprised that
he had no clue what to do about it.
Maybe that's because on paper it was a complete mismatch.
Woods, raised from birth to be the best player ever, led after
all three rounds and was so good on Sundays at majors that this one
seemed like little more than a victory lap. Yang, who took up golf
at age 19 only after tearing up his leg while trying to become a
bodybuilder, was in qualifying school last year and had never
sniffed the lead before at a major championship.
But it was Yang who kept calm even though he could barely sleep
the night before because he was so excited by it all.
"I wasn't that nervous, honestly, because it's a game of golf,"
he said through an interpreter.
"It's not like you're in an octagon
where you're fighting against Tiger and he's going to bite you or
swing at you with his 9-iron. The worst I could do was just lose to
Tiger."
Woods had more to lose, though it would be hard to accuse him of
choking his way to a 75. This is now officially a lost season for
Woods in the majors he so covets, and now he has to live with the
idea he couldn't close one out - a major that he had all but won.
That's a foreign concept for Woods, and one just as difficult to
digest for his millions of fans. They, like the massive crowds at
Hazeltine, expected him to come through until the bitter end
because, well, he's Tiger Woods and he always does.
He didn't this time, and maybe that's good. The streak is over
and now he can get to work on starting a new one.
It's going to be harder now but, for us, at least, it might
become even more fun.
Because Tiger Woods is human after all.