
Ten
years ago, an unknown 20-year old named Se Ri Pak won the LPGA
Championship and changed the LPGA Tour forever. It’s too soon to tell
whether Yani Tseng will have that kind of impact on her sport. But golf
fans will likely become very familiar with her in the days to come. At
19 years and four months of age Tseng’s winning effort at Bulle Rock
made her the youngest winner in history of an LPGA championship and the
second youngest player ever to win an LPGA major title.
Even before she arrived at Bulle Rock however, Tseng had put together
an impressive resume. There was the outstanding amateur record in her
native Taiwan as a teenager, the 2004 U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links
championship and the 2005 North South Amateur title. There was the tie
for sixth at last year’s CN Canadian Women’s Open even before she
attended Q-School last fall. She might have turned pro sooner, but the
LPGA wouldn’t let her enter Q-School because of her age. Once she
arrived on the LPGA Tour however, the rookie made an immediate impact,
with two second-place finishes in her first six starts.
All that experience paid off; Tseng seemed unfazed coming down the
stretch with a major title at stake and playing in the same group with
Lorena Ochoa. “It kind of feels different,” she said, “because I was
four shots behind (starting the final round) and I didn’t think I would
win the tournament. I just really tried to do my job and then play like
I did (Saturday). And it’s very different playing with Lorena, it’s very
relaxed this week. Not like last time, I was very nervous to try to
catch up with her.” Tseng even had some support from the gallery, some
former pro-am partners. “That was very good support,” she said with a
laugh. Before, I just heard ‘Lorena, Lorena.’ Today it’s ‘Yani, Yani.’
So it’s very exciting. I met them at the Sybase Classic. I played the
pro-am with them. They drove from New York. Tseng was playing golf in
Taiwan by the time she was six years old and grew up idolizing Tiger
Woods and Annika Sorenstam. She also forged a connection with perhaps
the best-known golfer ever to come from her homeland, T.C. Chen. “He was
one hour away from my home,” Tseng said. “So when he came in to practice
we played together and he was always teaching me something. He taught me
how to travel and everything, so he’s very nice.”
When Pak joined the LPGA Tour she turned a nation on to women’s golf.
Today, there are some 45 Korean players on the LPGA Tour. Could Tseng,
who now lives in Beaumont, Cal. have that kind of influence in her
homeland someday? “I try to support Taiwan golf,” she said. “Now it’s
getting better and I hope after this everybody can support golf in
Taiwan and they can come to the LPGA to play golf.”