Amy Yang

Amy Yang, also known as Yang Hee-Young (양희영, born 28 July 1989) is a South Korean professional golfer, currently playing on the United States-based LPGA Tour and on the Ladies European Tour (LET).

Amateur career
Yang began playing golf at age 10 in South Korea and moved to the Gold Coast of Australia with her family at age 15 to pursue golf more seriously.

In 2005, she won the Queensland Amateur Championship, the youngest winner ever of that championship. In 2006, while still an amateur she won the ANZ Ladies Masters on the Ladies European Tour (LET), making her the youngest winner ever on the LET at age 16 years, 196 days (a record later broken by 14-year-old amateur Atthaya Thitikul in July 2017).

Professional career
After her win in at the ANZ Ladies Masters, the LET offered Yang a special three-year membership exemption beginning in 2006 as a 17-year-old, providing she traveled with her parents until she turned 18. She recorded four top-20 finishes in 2007 while still attended high school.

Yang attended LPGA Tour qualifying school in the fall of 2007 and obtained conditional status on the LPGA Tour as well for 2008.

In June 2008, Yang claimed her second LET win with a four-shot win at the Ladies German Open. Upon winning, Yang announced that she was donating her entire prize of $61,260 to victims of a recent earthquake in China.

That December, she returned to the LPGA Qualifying School, this time earning full playing status for 2009 by finishing second in the five-round event.

On 20 October 2013, Yang won her first LPGA Tour event at the LPGA KEB-HanaBank Championship. She birdied the first sudden-death playoff hole to defeat Hee-Kyung Seo.

On 1 March 2015, Yang won her second LPGA tournament at the Honda LPGA Thailand, a title she won for a second and third time in 2017 and 2019 respectively.

On 24 June 2024, Yang won her first major title at the Women's PGA Championship in her 75th major start.

Personal life
Yang lives with her father, Joon Mo (James), mother, Sun Hee (Sunny), and younger brother, Steven. In the fall of 2007 the family moved from Australia to Orlando, Florida.

LPGA Tour wins (6)
LPGA Tour playoff record (1–1)

Ladies European Tour (3)

 * 2006 (1) ANZ Ladies Masters (as an amateur)
 * 2008 (2) Ladies German Open, Scandinavian TPC hosted by Annika

KLPGA Tour (2)

 * 2011 (1) KB Star Championship
 * 2013 (1) LPGA KEB-HanaBank Championship (co-sanctioned by LPGA Tour)

Results timeline
Results not in chronological order. ^ The Evian Championship was added as a major in 2013. {{legend|lime|Win}} {{legend|yellow|Top 10}} {{legend|#eeeeee|Did not play}} LA = low amateur CUT = missed the half-way cut NT = no tournament "T" = tied

Summary

 * Most consecutive cuts made – 15 (2014 Evian – 2017 Evian)
 * Longest streak of top-10s – 3 (twice)

LPGA Tour career summary
Official as of 23 June 2024 * Includes matchplay and other tournaments without a cut.

World ranking
Position in Women's World Golf Rankings at the end of each calendar year.

^ As of 24 June 2024

Team appearances
Professional
 * International Crown (representing South Korea): 2016