KOOL AND THE YANG: Y.E. Yang won his first major title, defeating Tiger Woods head-to-head in the 91st
PGA Championship. Yang became the first player ever to knock off Woods after he held at least a share of the 54-hole lead
in a major.

Y.E. Yang. Not Phil Mickelson, not Ernie Els, not Vijay Singh, not David Duval back in the day, not
any of those 20somethings. But Y.E. Yang. That's the guy who takes down Tiger in a major while looking him straight in the
eyes. This could only happen in a state which elected a fake wrestler as a real governor.
THE MIGHTY HAVE FALLEN: As mentioned, Tiger Woods is no longer invincible when holding the 54-hole
lead in a major. Up by two to start the final round, Woods bogeyed his final two holes Sunday to shoot 3-over 75 and finish
three back of Yang.

Poor putting killed Tiger. In fact, he played rather suspiciously all weekend. After taking a four-shot
lead after 36 holes, it seemed like he played conservatively, as if he figured no one would would be able to catch him so
long as he didn't make any mistakes. It had always worked in the past, but this time he
did make mistakes. And Yang
caught him, passed him, and beat him.
THE WRONG WAY: Aside from Yang, who deservedly won the 91st PGA Championship, the final round was filled
with players doing their best to avoid winning the tournament at all costs. Only 10 of the 79 players who made the cut shot
under par Sunday, and that didn't include defending champion Padraig Harrington, U.S. Open winner Lucas Glover and three-time
major champ Ernie Els – all of whom missed a great chance to add to their major collections.

Aside from Yang's chip-in eagle at the par-4 14th and birdie at the last, the final round was so
horrible I had to take my children to another room so they'd be able to sleep at night. "Harold and Maude" wasn't that offensive.
Ultimately, Yang was victorious. He deserved to win. Everyone else deserved to lose.
CRAZY EIGHTS: Padraig Harrington, vying for his second consecutive Wanamaker Trophy, was one shot back
of Tiger Woods while playing the par-3 eighth Sunday. He then proceeded to
make an 8 to fall out of contention. He
finished his title defense shooting 78 to tie for 10th.

We saw something eerily similar to this just one week prior at the WGC-Bridgestone. But Harrington
had a 'put-on-the-clock' excuse. There was no excuse for this. On a day filled with ugly golf, this was the Aunt Esther of
them all.
THERE IN BODY, NOT MIND: Phil Mickelson opened with a pair of 74s and closed with a pair of 76s to
finish 73rd at the PGA Championship, just his second event since the U.S. Open.

Mickelson wasn't sure when he would play again, saying that it would depend upon the timing of any
medical procedures his wife Amy might need in her battle with breast cancer. That leaves his FedEx Cup and Presidents Cup
participations up in the air. It was obvious at Hazeltine that Mickelson's mind wasn't focused solely on golf. As Cubs' fans
say, "Wait till next year."
DROP IT LIKE IT'S SCOTT: As always in a major, some notable names weren't around for the weekend. This
time the list included: John Daly,
who withdrew; Sergio Garcia, who shot a Friday 78; Seve Stricker, who didn't make a birdie over 36 holes (I know this
because
I picked him to win and I'm a bitter
man); Mike Weir, who carded a second-round 81; and Adam Scott, who finished 149th.

After shooting 82-79 this week, Scott admitted that he was on "a break" from long-time instructor
Butch Harmon. GolfChannel.com copy editor Dena Davis and I, however, place blame on his split from Kate Hudson. Scott was
seen with the actress in Hawaii, where he tied for second at the Sony Open. Since then Hudson has moved on to Alex Rodriguez
and Scott has been axed in nine of 12 Tour events with a 36-hole cut. This Kate Curse is the real deal. Her recent ex-boyfriends
reportedly include actors Heath Ledger (deceased), Owen Wilson (tried to be deceased) and Dax Shepard (career deceased). Fortunately,
I never have to worry about Hudson wanting to date me (though, I'm a bit scared just writing about her).
PRESS PASS: Pre-major press conferences are usually informative, and sometimes entertaining. Some of
the highlights prior to the PGA: Tiger Woods said he would be able to beat the 2000 version of himself; Colin Montgomerie
said he and Sandy Lyle talked and put behind them their dispute; and Stewart Cink told a funny story about
picking up a hitchhiker.

One item that really stood out was Tiger's response to his temper and use of foul language on the
course. "It is what it is," he said. Criticizing Woods for his temper would be hypocritical, because I'm not always on my
best behavior while playing golf. But I hate that answer. That's lamer than
Inspector Kemp's wooden arm. Woods said, "I don't mean to; it just comes out." Usually when people don't
mean to do something, and then they do it, they apologize. "It is what it is" sounds more defensive than apologetic.
THE PRESIDENTS MEN: The top 10 qualifiers were cemented for the United States and International Presidents
Cup teams. Yang's win knocked Rory Sabbatini out of the final top 10, while the U.S. top 10 remained the same, with Lucas
Glover moving to 11th. U.S. captain Fred Couples and International captain Greg Norman will select their two wildcards Sept.
8. Couples
told GolfChannel.com's
Randy Mell that Hunter Mahan is a lock for a pick and that the other likely choice would be Glover.

Compared to the Ryder Cup, the Presidents Cup receives the love of a stray cat. They could have discontinued
the points process, had the captains meet in an undisclosed Alaskan igloo and pick 12 players each, and it would have received
more publicity. In actuality, the Presidents Cup is an entertaining team event that fills a nice void at the end of the "regular"
season. It's just not the Ryder Cup. If the PGA Championship is "Glory's Last Shot," the Presidents Cup should be: "The Presidents
Cup ... it is what it is."
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: Tiger Woods refuted a report that said he was fined for his critical comments
of referee John Paramor (above) after the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. ... The International Olympic Committee’s executive
board recommended golf for submission into the 2016 Games.

Players/coaches in all sports should be allowed to criticize officials without monetary punishment.
... Y.E. Yang is the early favorite for gold.
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