
Yani Tseng hopes to rediscover ‘passion' at US Open after overcoming the yips
Tseng burst onto the scene in 2008 by winning the Women's PGA Championship and collected all five of her majors in a four-year spell which saw her reach the top of the world rankings in 2011 and 2012.
Three wins in the space of five weeks at the start of 2012 were her last to date on the LPGA however – she did win in her native Taiwan in 2014 – and Tseng's slow decline saw her slump outside the world's top 100 in 2017.
Tseng stepped away from the sport for almost two full years in 2019 due to a combination of a back injury and the Covid-19 pandemic, and when she worked hard to return felt that her putting woes meant she effectively needed to hole her approach shots to make up any ground on the competition.
5-time major champion Yani Tseng … is right-handed.
But the putting has been such a struggle lately that she's now putting left-handed. pic.twitter.com/Wo5zGrL2SP
— Sean Zak (@Sean_Zak) April 24, 2025
After missing the cut in all nine LPGA Tour starts in 2021 Tseng did not compete on the circuit in 2022 or 2023, but returned in April's Chevron Championship, where her switch from putting right-handed to left-handed became apparent.
'I was struggling with my short putts right-handed,' Tseng told the USGA website during a practice round at Erin Hills ahead of the 80th US Women's Open.
'I had the yips.'
Tseng began putting left-handed around six months ago and, using that technique, shot 70-71 in a 36-hole US Open qualifier at Arizona Country Club before claiming the only place in this week's field from a five-woman play-off.
'The passion never went away,' the 36-year-old added. '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.'
If you watched Yani Tseng dominate the women's game more than a decade ago, winning five majors along the way, the sight of her putting left-handed is nothing short of stunning! She had the yips, and the change is giving her hope. pic.twitter.com/hHhcGEklnW
— Beth Ann Nichols (@GolfweekNichols) April 25, 2025
As a past champion of the KPMG Women's PGA Championship and the AIG Women's Open, Tseng is eligible for those majors and plans to play them this year, at Fields Ranch East in Texas and Royal Porthcawl respectively.
She has been working with coach Kristine Reese from the Vision 54 programme run by Lynn Marriott and Pia Nilsson, who can count Annika Sorenstam and former Solheim Cup captain Suzann Pettersen among their pupils.
'What I need to focus is inside myself,' Tseng said. 'I need to focus on what I can control, like holding my finish.
'I need to believe in myself. Doubt is the most scary thing. The mechanical and the mental feed off each other.
'Just be yourself, be who you are. Keep looking into yourself and seeing the good things. I tried to be perfect all the time. That's not a way to live.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

South Wales Argus
6 hours ago
- South Wales Argus
Sweden's Maja Stark fends off Nelly Korda to clinch US Women's Open title
The 25-year-old became the sixth Swede to win a women's major, finishing two strokes ahead of Rio Takeda and World number one Nelly Korda. Korda carded 71 on the final day, while Takeda shot 72, both ending the tournament at five-under. Mao Saigo, Hye-Jin Choi and Ruoning Yin finished the tournament tied for fourth at four under, while Hailee Cooper and Hinako Shibuno finished three under. Maja Stark is a major champion 🏆 — LPGA (@LPGA) June 1, 2025 The competition tightened as Korda, Shibuno, and Takeda birdied the par-five 14th, cutting Stark's lead to two strokes. But Shibuno narrowly missed a nine-and-a-half-foot eagle attempt and Korda came up short on her own eagle putt. Stark responded with a birdie of her own on 14, restoring her three-shot lead before finishing the round with bogeys on the final two holes. Stark entered the final round with a one-stroke lead, one stroke ahead of Julia Lopez Ramirez, who ended the day tied for 19th. 'It feels so surreal, and it felt like it was so far away just a couple of weeks ago,' she told LPGA in the aftermath of her win. 'Just last week, my confidence was so low, and then I had a special friend tell me that you need to be confident. You need to trust yourself, and that's what I try to do. I try to make myself and everyone on my team proud.' Korda's runner-up finish is her strongest showing at the US Women's Open, improving on an eighth-place tie in 2022.

Leader Live
6 hours ago
- Leader Live
Sweden's Maja Stark fends off Nelly Korda to clinch US Women's Open title
The 25-year-old became the sixth Swede to win a women's major, finishing two strokes ahead of Rio Takeda and World number one Nelly Korda. Korda carded 71 on the final day, while Takeda shot 72, both ending the tournament at five-under. Mao Saigo, Hye-Jin Choi and Ruoning Yin finished the tournament tied for fourth at four under, while Hailee Cooper and Hinako Shibuno finished three under. Maja Stark is a major champion 🏆 — LPGA (@LPGA) June 1, 2025 The competition tightened as Korda, Shibuno, and Takeda birdied the par-five 14th, cutting Stark's lead to two strokes. But Shibuno narrowly missed a nine-and-a-half-foot eagle attempt and Korda came up short on her own eagle putt. Stark responded with a birdie of her own on 14, restoring her three-shot lead before finishing the round with bogeys on the final two holes. Stark entered the final round with a one-stroke lead, one stroke ahead of Julia Lopez Ramirez, who ended the day tied for 19th. 'It feels so surreal, and it felt like it was so far away just a couple of weeks ago,' she told LPGA in the aftermath of her win. 'Just last week, my confidence was so low, and then I had a special friend tell me that you need to be confident. You need to trust yourself, and that's what I try to do. I try to make myself and everyone on my team proud.' Korda's runner-up finish is her strongest showing at the US Women's Open, improving on an eighth-place tie in 2022.

Rhyl Journal
7 hours ago
- Rhyl Journal
Sweden's Maja Stark fends off Nelly Korda to clinch US Women's Open title
The 25-year-old became the sixth Swede to win a women's major, finishing two strokes ahead of Rio Takeda and World number one Nelly Korda. Korda carded 71 on the final day, while Takeda shot 72, both ending the tournament at five-under. Mao Saigo, Hye-Jin Choi and Ruoning Yin finished the tournament tied for fourth at four under, while Hailee Cooper and Hinako Shibuno finished three under. Maja Stark is a major champion 🏆 — LPGA (@LPGA) June 1, 2025 The competition tightened as Korda, Shibuno, and Takeda birdied the par-five 14th, cutting Stark's lead to two strokes. But Shibuno narrowly missed a nine-and-a-half-foot eagle attempt and Korda came up short on her own eagle putt. Stark responded with a birdie of her own on 14, restoring her three-shot lead before finishing the round with bogeys on the final two holes. Stark entered the final round with a one-stroke lead, one stroke ahead of Julia Lopez Ramirez, who ended the day tied for 19th. 'It feels so surreal, and it felt like it was so far away just a couple of weeks ago,' she told LPGA in the aftermath of her win. 'Just last week, my confidence was so low, and then I had a special friend tell me that you need to be confident. You need to trust yourself, and that's what I try to do. I try to make myself and everyone on my team proud.' Korda's runner-up finish is her strongest showing at the US Women's Open, improving on an eighth-place tie in 2022.