
Yani Tseng during one of her visits to RACV Royal Pines on the Gold Coast – image Bruce Young
The return of former world number one, Yani Tseng, to the US Women’s Open this week at Erin Hills Golf Course, to play the event for the first time since 2016, was a heartwarming occasion for all.
The now 36-year-old Taiwanese golfer, who won 15 LPGA Tour titles including five major championships, in a five-year period between turning professional in 2007 and 2012, lost her way through injuries (hip surgeries), technical and resultant physcological issues.
Coming off an amateur career which included victories in two Junior World Championships, the US Women’s Amateur Public Links and North and South Amateur titles, Tseng was named the LPGA Tour’s Rookie of the Year in 2008.
In March of 2009, she became the youngest golfer to reach US$2 million in earnings on the LPGA Tour, and, a year later, she won her first major title when taking the Kraft Nabisco title and followed that a few months later with a win at the Women’s British Open.
She would go on to win another three majors and, in early 2011 after winning the ANZ Ladies Masters at RACV Royal Pines, she became the world number one, a mantle she held for 109 consecutive weeks. She also won the Women’s Australian Open in 2010, included in a total of 12 worldwide victories, alongside her LPGA Tour success.
The Florida-based golfer attended qualifying for the Women’s US Open, and in a superb achievement given the trials and tribulations she has experienced since her demise in 2013, she gained one of the two places available at her venue in Phoenix and joined the field for this week’s championship near Milwaukee.
Tseng suffered numerous injury, surgical, technical and psychological issues which led to her demise from being one of the greats in the game to near obscurity, but her return to competitive golf this week in such a significant event, allows us all a reminder of the great and dominant player she was.
This week, she spoke to the media ahead of the event.
“The passion never went away,” Tseng said Sunday at Erin Hills before a practice round with close friend Lydia Ko. “The past few years I’ve been disappointed with my performance, but I love golf, I love competition, I love the people. I want to prove to myself that I can still be a player at this level. I want to see how far I can go.”
“It’s crazy. Just incredible. Feel grateful, very grateful to be back. It’s so different. I feel like I’m like a little kid. To experience all the great hospitality and the friends, it’s just a lot of things that are no longer familiar. Nine years can change a lot, and I just feel very grateful to play the course like this and to see all the new purses, too, it’s crazy.
“I just enjoy every step that I’m coming back. I’m just very happy that I didn’t give up. That way I’ll never know these beautiful things could happen to me again.”
When asked why she didn’t quit given the battles she faced, Tseng responded;
“I don’t know, I asked myself a lot of times, too, because I think it’s very easy to quit. But I think every time I practice, every little step, little progress, gave me hope. I think that hope is kind of what carries me to be where I am now. I fell down so many times. I stood back up and I kept moving forward.
“I know I’m not like in my 20s, but I know Juli Inkster won her first U.S. Open when she was 39, so I’m not far away. I wanted to give myself this opportunity, an opportunity to win a spot back here. To allow the professionals or amateurs this opportunity to play the USGA tournament, that’s always been my dream since I was 13, and to come back here is so different than playing my first U.S. Open and the last U.S. Open and now.
“I just like the feeling and everything, I feel like this is the happiest ever.”
Having watched Tseng at close quarter during the time she played the ANZ Ladies Masters at RACV Royal Pines both as an amateur and a professional (Tournament Director Bob Tuohy gave her invitations based on her brilliance as an amateur) I can honestly say I have never seen a female golfer strike her irons so sweetly as Tseng displayed when at the peak of her powers.
The sound off the club was unlike any other woman of that era (with the possible exception of Karrie Webb) and her demise was so disappointing, for not only her, but for many of us who enjoyed her powerful and at times cavalier way of playing.
It is so good to see her back and keen to compete, and wherever her journey takes her in the future, her record in the female game should never be overlooked.
Yani Tseng was truly one of the game’s greatest, even if just for a few years.

This writer with Yani Tseng at ANZ Ladies Masters the day she became World Number One