Y.E. Yang, the man who conquered Tiger Woods, is disqualified from the PGA Championship

A scorecard error led to Y.E. Yang’s disqualification from the 103rd PGA Championship.

KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. – Y.E. Yang, who took down Tiger Woods in the final round to win the Wanamaker Trophy in 2009, was disqualified Friday at the 103rd PGA Championship.

Yang, whose last victory came in the 2018 Crowns on the Japan Golf Tour, signed an incorrect scorecard following the second round at The Ocean Course on Kiawah Island. Yang singed for a 4 on the par-4 10th when he actually made a 5.

After he signed the scorecard and left the scoring area, he was disqualified. According to Rule 3.3b, which addresses a player’s responsibility when scoring in stroke play, the player is disqualified if he returns a score for any hole lower than the one actually taken for any reason other than failing to include a penalty stroke he did not know about.

Yang shot 75 in the first round and followed it up with a second-round 83 (an 84 with the adjusted score on No. 10). He was 14 over when he signed his incorrect scorecard.

In better days, Yang overcame a two-shot deficit in the final round to topple Woods at Hazeltine National in Minnesota. Yang closed with a 70 for a 3-shot win for his lone major championship triumph.

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PGA Championship tee times, featured groups, TV and streaming info for Friday’s second round

Everything you need to know for the second round of the PGA Championship.

The 103rd PGA Championship continues on Friday from Kiawah Island Golf Resort’s Ocean Course in South Carolina, and with a handful of storylines and groups to watch.

Corey Conners took the early lead on Thursday after a 5-under 67, with six players tied for second at 3 under: 2011 PGA champion Keegan Bradley, Viktor Hovland, 2018 and 2019 champion Brooks Koepka, Aaron Wise, Sam Horsfield and Cam Davis.

Defending champion Collin Morikawa sits T-8 at 3 under, while Rory McIlroy, the winner of the 2012 PGA held at Kiawah, struggled to a 3-over 75 and sits T-82.

Here’s everything you need to know for the second round of the PGA Championship. All times listed are Eastern Standard Time.

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1st tee

Tee Time Players
7 a.m. Si Woo Kim, Danny Balin, Jim Herman
7:11 a.m. Sami Valimaki, Joe Summerhays, Richy Werenski
7:22 a.m. Sebastian Munoz, Tim Pearce, Sam Horsfield
7:33 a.m. Y.E. Yang, Shaun Micheel, Rich Beem
7:44 a.m. Joaquin Niemann, J.T. Poston, Aaron Rai
7:55 a.m. Branden Grace, Adam Hadwin, Rasmus Hojgaard
8:06 a.m. Russell Henley, Jazz Janewattananond, Carlos Ortiz
8:17 a.m. Andy Sullivan, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Kevin Streelman
8:28 a.m. Ian Poulter, Brian Harman, Sungjae Im
8:39 a.m. Antoine Rozner, Chez Reavie, Brandon Stone
8:50 a.m. Victor Perez, Omar Uresti, Maverick McNealy
9:01 a.m. Tyler Collet, Brendon Todd, Lucas Herbert
9:12 a.m. Ben Cook, Mackenzie Hughes, Takumi Kanaya
12:30 p.m. Ben Polland, Talor Gooch, Harry Higgs
12:41 p.m. Rob Labritz, Brendan Steele, Harold Varner III
12:52 p.m. Paul Casey, Garrick Higgo, Marc Leishman
1:03 p.m. Rickie Fowler, Adam Scott, Tyrrell Hatton
1:14 p.m. Robert MacIntyre, Cameron Champ, John Catlin
1:25 p.m. Zach Johnson, Brandon Hagy, Scottie Scheffler
1:36 p.m. Louis Oosthuizen, Ryan Palmer, Thomas Detry
1:47 p.m. Lee Westwood, Viktor Hovland, Xander Schauffele
1:58 p.m. Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas, Brooks Koepka
2:09 p.m. Collin Morikawa, Bryson DeChambeau, Hideki Matsuyama
2:20 p.m. Charley Hoffman, Matt Wallace, Erik van Rooyen
2:31 p.m. Chan Kim, Brett Walker, Brian Gay
2:42 p.m. Aaron Wise, Sonny Skinner, Kalle Samooja

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10th tee

Tee Time Players
7:05 a.m. Frank Bensel, Jr., Robert Streb, Kurt Kitayama
7:16 a.m. Alex Beach, Daniel van Tonder, Wyndham Clark
7:27 a.m. Abraham Ancer, Max Homa
7:38 a.m. Tony Finau, Matt Fitzpatrick, Corey Conners
7:49 a.m. Phil Mickelson, Jason Day, Padraig Harrington
8 a.m. Tommy Fleetwood, Jon Rahm, Patrick Reed
8:11 a.m. Gary Woodland, Justin Rose, Cameron Smith
8:22 a.m. Steve Stricker, Billy Horschel, Daniel Berger
8:33 a.m. Webb Simpson, Will Zalatoris, Jordan Spieth
8:44 a.m. Dustin Johnson, Shane Lowry, Sergio Garcia
8:55 a.m. Thomas Pieters, Patrick Cantlay, Matt Kuchar
9:06 a.m. Chris Kirk, Pete Ballo, Cam Davis
9:17 a.m. Dean Burmester, Greg Koch, K.H. Lee
12:25 p.m. Patrick Rada, Adam Long, Cameron Tringale
12:36 p.m. Dylan Frittelli, Larkin Gross, Matt Jones
12:47 p.m. Byeong Hun An, Derek Holmes, George Coetzee
12:58 p.m. Bernd Wiesberger, Tom Hoge, Joel Dahmen
1:09 p.m. John Daly, Jimmy Walker, Jason Dufner
1:20 p.m. Kevin Kisner, Martin Laird, Hudson Swafford
1:31 p.m. Henrik Stenson, Danny Willett, Bubba Watson
1:42 p.m. Keegan Bradley, Martin Kaymer, Charl Schwartzel
1:53 p.m. Harris English, Stewart Cink, Alex Noren
2:04 p.m. Kevin Na, Tom Lewis, Jason Kokrak
2:15 p.m. Jason Scrivener, Stuart Smith, Emiliano Grillo
2:26 p.m. Brad Marek, Peter Malnati, Lanto Griffin
2:37 p.m. Mark Geddes, Denny McCarthy, Rikuya Hoshino

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Math whiz Corey Conners figures out Ocean Course, takes lead in PGA Championship

“Played with a lot of freedom,” said Conners of his six birdie, one bogey opening round.

KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. – Corey Conners had a backup plan if he didn’t make his hay in the world of golf.

The Canadian was likely going to be an actuary, having earned a Bachelor of Science in Actuarial Mathematics from Kent State University. This came after he switched majors after leaving the Biochemistry program because the chemistry labs were nearly five hours long and cut into his practice time on the golf course.

Yes, Conners has some skills between the ears.

Has some talent on the golf course, too. His decision-making and analysis worked just fine on Thursday as he figured out his way around the Pete Dye brute known as the Ocean Course at Kiawah in just 67 strokes to take the first round lead of the 103rd PGA Championship.

“I’d say it’s impossible to be stress-free around this golf course. You can’t fall asleep out there on any holes. It’s very challenging,” Conners said. “I was fortunate to have a good day. Made it as least stressful as possible on myself. I hit a lot of really good shots and holed some nice putts early in the round, and that really helped boost the confidence. Played with a lot of freedom.”

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At 5 under, Conners is two shots clear of the field, with a group of players at 69, including four-time major champion and two-time PGA winner Brooks Koepka, 2011 PGA champ Keegan Bradley and Viktor Hovland. Defending champion Collin Morikawa came home with a 70.

On the other end of the leaderboard were a few of the game’s best players, including Rory McIlroy, who won the Wells Fargo Championship in his last start. He and 2017 PGA winner and 2021 Players champion Justin Thomas each shot 75. Sergio Garcia turned in a 77, Adam Scott turned a 78.

World No. 1 Dustin Johnson shot 76.

The Ocean Course is just the latest big stage in golf that Conners has performed well on. He finished third in the Arnold Palmer Invitational, seventh in the Players Championship and tied for eighth in the Masters.

He’s been a regular on the first page of leaderboards for a few months now as he seeks his first major title and second PGA Tour victory. He’s been on a steady rise up the world rankings, climbing from No. 196 when he won the 2019 Valero Texas Open to No. 39 heading into this week.

“I have a lot of belief in myself, and I’ve been playing well for quite a while,” Conner said. “I’m excited for the opportunity to play against the best players in the world and put my game to the test. I have a lot of confidence in my game and I’m excited for the rest of the weekend.

“Didn’t try to force it to happen but definitely saw myself having a good day today and hopefully can keep that up the rest of the weekend.”

Heading into the week much of the chatter was about the course being a haven for ball-strikers, and Conners is one of the best in the game. But Conners learned another part of the game is just as crucial, if not more crucial.

“I think one of most important things is the short game around this place,” he said. “A lot of major championships you can’t ball-strike your way to good rounds. You need to have a good short game. You need to get the ball up-and-down and you need to roll in birdie putts. Good ball-striking definitely helps. The wind and difficulty of the golf course, hitting it solid is very important.

“But you’re going to get in spots where you need to get the ball up-and-down and hole a putt or two, and you need to be able to do that, as well.”

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Phil Mickelson lights up Kiawah’s back nine in 32, sits 3 back at PGA Championship

Phil Mickelson raved about the course and setup: “The thing about this course is it’s very fair even though it’s tough.”

KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. – When Phil Mickelson opened with four bogeys in his first six holes at the PGA Championship, it looked as if he was headed for another forgettable week.

Mickelson hasn’t recorded a top-10 finish on the PGA Tour since August and finished 69th after holding the first-round lead two weeks ago at the Wells Fargo Championship.

But he overcame a rough start Thursday and played his next 10 holes in 5 under to shoot 2-under 70 at the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Golf Resort, three strokes behind leader Corey Conners.

“I’ve been having trouble staying present on every shot for the entire round,” Mickelson told ESPN in an interview after the round. “I thought I did a pretty good job today.”

Mickelson, the 2005 PGA Championship winner, got off to an inauspicious start at the 103rd PGA Championship with a bogey at the first. He got back to level par by wedging to 4 feet at the third hole, but then made three bogeys in a row beginning at the fourth.

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From there, Mickelson took advantage of some of the downwind holes, making birdies on three of the four par 5s at the Pete Dye layout (Nos. 7, 11, 16), and, as he put it, “snuck one in on 10,” after blasting a 344-yard drive and wedging to 5 feet.

“What I did do well was putt extremely solid inside 6-7 feet,” he said. “I didn’t make anything outside of that, but I did make everything inside of it.”

Mickelson saved his best work for the grueling five-hole stretch coming home. He played those holes in 2 under, carding back-to-back birdies at 15 and 16 and getting up and down for pars on the final two holes. His 32 on the second nine was nearly six strokes better than the field average. Still, Mickelson said he didn’t like the way he struck the ball on Thursday and rushed from his post-round interview with ESPN to the range to clean up his swing.

While others found reason to complain about the windy conditions or bad luck, Mickelson raved about the course and setup: “The thing about this course is it’s very fair even though it’s tough.”

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Bryson DeChambeau ‘out of sorts’ at PGA Championship after opening-round 72, calls Kiawah ‘diabolical’

In the battle between the longest hitter on Tour and the longest course in major championship history, round 1 went to the Ocean Course.

KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. – In the battle between the longest hitter on the PGA Tour and the longest course in major championship history, round 1 went to the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Golf Resort.

Bryson DeChambeau returned an even-par 72 on Thursday (leading one of the judges to score it a draw), but he looked bruised and battered afterwards and admitted as much.

“The wind just kicked my butt,” he said. “Just grinding out there, it takes a lot out of you.”

As a matter of fact, he struggled to remember many of the finer details of his up-and-down round, which began with two birdies in his first three holes, starting at No. 11, playing downwind before a sloppy 3-putt bogey at 13 and a string of four bogeys in a row when the wind flipped into his face. As he tried to remember where he had taken three putts – was it 12 or was it 13? It was 13! – an exasperated DeChambeau gave up and said, “I’m all out of sorts. It’s a lot of wind out there and heat.”

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In actuality, it was just a typical windy day at Kiawah, but for DeChambeau, who turns hitting every shot into a math equation, the wind put him through an assortment of mental exercises.

“This golf course takes it out of you. This is the most difficult golf course that I’ve played on Tour, and that is a straight-up fact for me,” he said. “That requires a lot of energy.”

Eventually, DeChambeau was told that if he looked behind him he could see his hole-by-hole scorecard in lights and that allowed him to gather himself and continue discussing his misadventures on his first nine holes where he was in danger of falling out of contention at the year’s second major on Thursday.

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“Three-putted 13, then 14 kind of came about from just not making a good first shot. 15, hit two good shots, just misaligned the drive on 15, hit it too far left, didn’t get it up and down. 16, misjudged the wind on the first shot, and there you go,” he said. “It’s a quick four bogeys and off and running after a good start.”

But DeChambeau played steady from there, making birdies on both of the par 5s (Nos. 2 and 7) and traded a bogey at No. 3 with a birdie at No. 8 when he drained a 20-foot birdie putt.

“For the most part, I stuck my head up high and kept it high and was able to finish strong on the front nine,” he said. “Played really well.”

That might be a stretch. His putter was cold (-1.385 SG: Putting), his driver was crooked (8 of 14 fairways) and his iron game was stymied by a breath of wind by Kiawah standards (11 of 18 greens in regulation). He’s going to have to do better at flighting his irons if he’s going to mount a charge for the title. As DeChambeau’s third shot from 97 yards got caught blowing in the wind, he seemed mystified.

“Oh my goodness,” he muttered as it hit short of the green and bounced into a deep bunker left of the green that led to a bogey on a par 5. Still, returning a score at level par is nothing to sniff at on a day when only four players broke 70 in the early wave.

“Getting to 4-over is really nothing out here either. It’s diabolical,” DeChambeau said. “You’ve got to be on point every single hole.”

Watching DeChambeau battle on Thursday was a reminder that golf is hard, even when you can hit it a country mile.

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Is Rickie Fowler turning the corner at the PGA Championship? He thinks so.

Rickie Fowler was in good spirits after his first round at the PGA Championship and opened up on his recent struggles.

KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. – I’m starting to feel pretty darn good.

Those were the words of Rickie Fowler on Thursday as he happily took to the stage in front of the media after his first round in the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island. He hasn’t said anything akin to that for some time now, his struggles inside the gallery ropes nosediving his world ranking and challenging his always sunny disposition.

His official world ranking is down to No. 128 – his lowest since 2009. The winner of nine titles worldwide – including five on the PGA Tour, his most recent coming in the 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open – has missed 13 cuts in his last 29 starts on the PGA Tour. His last top-10 came in January 2020. His best finish this year is a tie for 17th in the Valero Texas Open. He didn’t qualify for the Masters, the first major he’s missed since 2010.

And all his struggles adapting to swing changes haven’t happened in the dark.

“It’s tough for anybody regardless, spotlight or not, because you deal with the personal and mental struggle on your own,” Fowler said. “It’s probably a little different, whether it’s answer questions or know that there are people talking about what’s going on or whatever it may be.

“When you’re going through anything, whether it be something personal with any of your lives or my golf game or whatever it may be, it’s hard. It doesn’t matter whether people are watching or not, but it adds a little bit if they are.”

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With his form in freefall, Fowler needed a sponsor’s exemption to get into the PGA Championship. He’s made the most of his opportunity so far with a 1-under-par 71 on the windswept Ocean Course to stand two shots out of the early lead among the early starters.

“It’s Thursday. As everyone says, you can’t win it, but you can take yourself out of it on Thursday,” Fowler said. “It’s all about getting off to a good start. So definitely happy about it. I feel like we managed our way around quite well. I missed one shortish putt for par coming in, but other than that, solid day.”

He’s had quite a few solid days of late, especially during prep work ahead of tournaments. He has reached the point where he doesn’t have to concentrate on the technical aspects of his swing changes. Instead, he’s focused on just figuring out a way to get the golf ball in the hole.

“The last few months, it’s been a lot more just go play golf and not play golf swing,” he said. “Put a lot of time in prior to the last few months of working on swing and doing the stuff we kind of needed to work on and accomplish. Now it’s just, go play golf.

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“Unfortunately, through that time, the putter has gone pretty cold, if not the coldest it’s ever been for me, and that’s been a club I’ve been able to rely on through my career from junior golf on up.

“With this golf course and the wind and what it kind of demands of you, you can’t try and go out there and be perfect. You’ve just got to go out there and hit golf shots and kind of play with what you have that day.”

As for his putter, his bread and butter over the years, it was working as he needed just 27 putts on the difficult greens. He put in extra hours on the greens this week ahead of the first round.

“Definitely happy with the time we spent to take it into today and get some positives out of it,” he said. “It’s nice to at least make some putts today.”

While at times it’s been tough to handle as the poor results mounted, Fowler has never lost sight of what he gets to do for a living.

“In a way, it’s just putting things into perspective and understanding that I get to do this for a living. And that’s awesome. I’ve had a great run so far out here. I definitely want more,” he said. “We have it pretty darn good out here.”

And one other thing that doesn’t have him feeling the blues.

“We’re on our way back now,” he said.

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Bryson DeChambeau hoping to ‘unleash the beast’ at PGA Championship

Bryson DeChambeau called Kiawah Island’s Ocean Course “a beast” and he’ll try to unleash ‘The Kraken,’ his name for his driver, to slay it.

KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. – The Incredible Bulk meets the longest course in major championship history.

“This golf course is a beast,” said Bryson DeChambeau. “Hopefully I can unleash the beast.”

Pete Dye’s Ocean Course masterpiece at Kiawah Island Golf Resort measures in at 7,846 yards and when the wind blows, look out.

“It is probably one of the hardest golf courses I’ve ever played,” DeChambeau said.

The reigning U.S. Open champion is set to make his fifth appearance in the PGA Championship this week, and finished T-4 last year at TPC Harding Park, which at the time was his best finish at a major. During his pre-tournament press conference on Wednesday, DeChambeau expressed plenty of respect for a course that has forced him to take some head covers off for approaches to greens and, heavens to Betsy, a tee shot at a par 3.

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“I have not had hybrids or 4-irons into par-3s since I’ve gotten longer,” he said. “That’s a new one.”

But if anyone can take advantage of his prodigious length this week, it could be DeChambeau, who leads the PGA Tour in driving distance at 322 yards. ESPN’s Andy North marveled at DeChambeau’s bold attempt to drive the par-5 sixth green at Bay Hill in March during the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

“No one else can hit it the places he can hit it right now,” said North, a two-time U.S. Open champion during his playing days. “Anybody watched Bay Hill, the couple of tee shots he hit at Bay Hill were the most ridiculous things I’ve ever seen. Unfortunately, our lines were 50 yards to the right of that, and it was still scary.”

Scary is to hear DeChambeau talk about throttling back and still belting a drive of 385 yards last week at the AT&T Byron Nelson. He abandoned his 4.5-degree Cobra driver in favor of a model that has three degrees more loft, a different face design and different weight. It more closely resembles a Cobra driver he used back in 2018 when he said he was driving it on a string until he broke the face.

“It’s not fully maxed out with everything, and there are reasons for that,” he explained. “You can’t let it loose out here. There’s certain golf courses like last week (at TPC Craig Ranch near Dallas) I could kind of let it loose a little bit, but even at that I was still trying to control ball flight. I’m still trying to gain speed. It’s not like I’m not. It’s just I’m trying to find more efficient ways to do it.”

For the first time since undergoing his physical transformation, DeChambeau has hit a wall in his pursuit of speed.

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“I’m the strongest I’ve ever been, but it doesn’t produce swing speed, which is really interesting, so how to increase swing speed like you’re working out is something that nobody has ever really figured out,” he explained. “When quarantine came about I had time to physically transform everything. I took a couple weeks off of even playing golf or touching a golf club and literally changed my body. I don’t have that time now.”

And so while he continues down rabbit holes in search of answers on how to gain more distance, he’s content that his power game is an advantage at the Ocean Course – “If you don’t hit it long, it’s going to be a tough week,” he said – but it might not be his biggest one.

“If I can hit it straight this week in this wind and control the golf ball and control the flight of it, that’ll be my biggest advantage,” he said.

That may be a big ‘if.’ DeChambeau’s high ball flight isn’t ideal for Kiawah, where the fickle wind causes indecision in club selection and execution. DeChambeau, the Tour’s most analytical golfer, has been known to simulate the dew on a golf ball to try to understand how it affected spin rates on wedge shots. To no surprise, he was up to his usual tricks in trying to prep for wind conditions at the PGA.

“Man, you guys are going to eat this one up, but the laminar flow of the wind and how it works,” he said.  “A lot of it is going to be dependent on luck this week. I will say that. When it’s dependent on luck you have to be patient.”

It should be great theater to see whether the World No. 5 can blast drivers and find the short grass and flight his irons into the wind and maintain his composure at what he calls one of the toughest courses he’s ever played. But he said he’s up to the challenge and wouldn’t have it any other way.

“I would say a few weeks a year is OK. That’s for sure,” he said. “This is one of those weeks.”

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