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Posted: 2024-06-24 03:08:03

Honorary Australian Amy Yang has choked back tears after running away with the Women's PGA Championship in Washington.

After knocking on the door for more than a decade, the former Gold Coast high school prodigy landed her maiden major championship with a three-stroke triumph over fellow South Korean Ko Jin-young, American world number two Lilia Vu and Japan's Miya Yamashita.

Yang started the final round with a two-shot buffer and stormed to a seven-stroke lead at one point, before settling for a closing even-par 72 at Sahalee Country Club, east of Seattle.

She finished with a seven-under 281 total and the $US1.56 million ($2.35 million) winner's cheque.

Ko (71), Vu (71) and Yamashita (73) shared the runner-up spoils at four-under, one better than Americans Ally Ewing (71) and Lauren Hartlage (74).

Not even a three-putt bogey on the 16th hole and a watery double on 17 could deny Yang after several near misses at the majors.

Amy Yang holds the Women's PGA Championship trophy in front of the leaderboard with her name on it.

Amy Yang had a few nervy moments late in the last round, but held on to win her first major at 34.(AP: Gerald Herbert)

Yang, who completed her education at Robina State High and won the Australian Ladies Masters at Royal Pines Resort as a 16-year-old while in year 11, was runner-up at the US Women's Open in both 2012 and 2015.

Twice she held the 54-hole lead in majors, only to fall short.

The 34-year-old also finished fourth on five occasions at the PGA Championship, Women's British Open and Chevron Championship.

Now, at age 34, Yang is the oldest major winner on the LPGA Tour since Angela Stanford won the 2018 Evian Championship at 40.

This was Yang's 75th major start, also the most before a player's first success since Stanford, who was playing her 76th.

"I'm lost for words right now," Yang said after saluting for the first time since winning last year's season-ending Tour Championship.

"So all the hard work our team did together, I'm so grateful for that.

"I always wanted to win a major and I came close several times and I started doubting if I'm ever going to win a major before I retire.

"I've been on tour quite a while and I am so grateful and very, very happy to win a major."

Her reward for finally breaking through is a spot on South Korea's Olympic team for a third time.

Paris Games teammates Hannah Green (71) and Minjee Lee (74) finished as joint top Australians, in a tie for 24th at four-over.

The Perth duo, who will join men's representatives Jason Day and Lee's brother Min Woo in Paris, still have another major — the Evian Championship in France from July 11–14 — before the Olympics.

Green, the world number five boasting two wins already in 2024, will head home for 10 days to recharge.

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