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Danny Lee (golfer)

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Danny Lee
Lee in 2009
Personal information
Full nameDanny Jin-Myung Lee
Born(1990-07-24)24 July 1990(age 33)
Incheon,South Korea
Height6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight168 lb (76 kg; 12.0 st)
Sporting nationalityNew Zealand
ResidenceIrving, Texas,U.S.
Spouse
Yoomi Kong
(m.2017)
Children2
Career
Turned professional2009
Current tour(s)LIV Golf
Former tour(s)PGA Tour
European Tour
Web.com Tour
Professional wins4
Highestranking34 (14 February 2016)[1]
Number of wins by tour
PGA Tour1
European Tour1
Asian Tour1
PGA Tour of Australasia1
Korn Ferry Tour1
LIV Golf1
Best results in major championships
Masters TournamentT17: 2016
PGA ChampionshipT36: 2019
U.S. OpenT57: 2016
The Open ChampionshipCUT: 2015, 2016
Achievements and awards
Mark H. McCormack Medal2008

Danny Jin-Myung Lee(Korean:이진명;born 24 July 1990) is aNew Zealandprofessional golfer.Lee was born inIncheon,South Korea,and emigrated to New Zealand at the age of eight.[2]He became a New Zealand citizen on 2 September 2008 inRotorua,[3]where he attendedRotorua Boys' High School.

Amateur career[edit]

Lee became the youngest ever winner of theU.S. Amateurin August 2008, aged 18 years and one month,[4]six months younger thanTiger Woodswhen he won in 1994. His age record was broken the following year by 17-year-oldAn Byeong-hun.He became number one in theWorld Amateur Golf Rankingon 20 August 2008 and remained number one until he turned pro in April 2009. He was awarded the 2008Mark H. McCormack Medalon 27 August.[5]

In October 2008, Lee represented New Zealand at theEisenhower Trophyin Adelaide, Australia. A final round 11-over 84 saw him finish T37 in the individual standings.[6][7]The New Zealand team finished tied for 11th.[8]

In February 2009, Lee won theJohnnie Walker ClassicinPerth,Australia,a professional tournament co-sanctioned by theEuropean,Asian,andAustralasiantours. He was the youngest ever winner on the European Tour, surpassingDale Hayes,and only the second amateur winner afterPablo Martín.[9][10][11]The win took him to 159th place in theOfficial World Golf Ranking.[12]

Lee's first major was the2009 Masters Tournament,where his first round two-over 74 put him in a position to make the cut. In the second round he eagled the par-5 eighth and played the front nine in 34, but a six-putt led to quintuple bogey on the 10th, dropping him to five-over for the tournament. He was unable to recover, eventually finishing 11-over par.[13]

Professional career[edit]

2009: Bid for PGA Tour status falls short[edit]

Lee turned professional after the 2009 Masters Tournament,[14]forfeiting his guaranteed entry into the2009 U.S. Openand the2009 British Openas the 2008 U.S. Amateur champion.

In April, Lee signed a two-year endorsement contract withCallaway Golf,to use Callaway clubs, balls, and signage on his clothes. The company has not released how much his contract is worth, but sources say it is forUS$1 million per year.[15]

Lee was allowed to use seven sponsor exemptions during thePGA Tourseason, and gained three other starts courtesy of his U.S. Amateur and Johnnie Walker Classic titles. His goal was to earn $537,958 which would have given him temporary membership and allowed him to receive an unlimited amount of invitations.[16]That figure is the amount earned by the player who finished 150th on the 2008 money list.

Lee made six out of eleven PGA Tour cuts after turning pro, with two top-25 finishes. He tied for 13th at theHP Byron Nelson Championshipin May, and improved on his best finish in a PGA Tour event by finishing in a tie for 7th at theAT&T Nationalin July. That top ten finish earned Lee a spot in the following week'sJohn Deere Classic,meaning he did not have to use one of his two remaining sponsor exemptions.[17]The money from his T-7 finish put him $187,904 away from earning temporary status on tour. Lee missed the cut by two strokes at the John Deere Classic after bogeying the last two holes of his second round. Lee missed the cut again three weeks later at theBuick Open.

In August, Lee became the youngest player to play in aWorld Golf Championshipevent when he played theWGC-Bridgestone Invitational.[18]He finished T51 at the event. He made the cut but did not finish at theWyndham Championshiptwo weeks later. He used his last sponsor exemption of the season to play in that tournament and did not earn enough money on tour to earn his card for 2010.

Lee then switched his focus to the European Tour, as well as playing selected events in Asia. He made his maiden appearance as a professional in Europe at theJohnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagleswhere he finished T10.[19]As a drawcard for theKorea Openand theCoca-Cola Tokai Classicin Japan, he played the first two rounds of both events with fellow teen prodigyRyo Ishikawa.

Lee entered the PGA Tour'squalifying schoolat the first stage level,[20]beginning his campaign in McKinney, Texas on 20 October.[21]Needing to finish in roughly the top third of the field, rounds of 72-78-69-76 saw him fall well short of advancing to the second stage.[22]

After arriving back in Asia for theSingapore Open,Lee cited swing changes, illness and cold weather as reasons for his disappointing performance in Texas, and confirmed an intention to play mainly on the European Tour in 2010.[23]He also announced he had signed Korean-born Suckki Jang, an affiliate ofHank Haney,as his new coach.[24]He then played theWGC-HSBC Champions,theHong Kong Open,and represented New Zealand withDavid Smailat theOmega Mission Hills World Cup,all with limited success.

2010[edit]

Lee made a poor start to the 2010 season, making just two cuts in his first nine events on the European Tour.

On the eve of theBMW PGA Championshipin May, Lee announced a new partnership with English caddy Peter Coleman. "I finally feel that I am in the right position with my swing and that has got me really excited," Lee said.[25]

However, after receiving a sponsor's invite to play theRBC Canadian Openin July, Lee stated he was now without a swing coach. He added that he had been through several coaches since turning professional and had perhaps become too technical with his mechanics, and was now trying to focus more on playing than tweaking his swing.[26]

Lee eventually finished the Race to Dubai in 159th place, making 10 out of 20 cuts with a best finish of T21 at theBMW International Openin June.[27]

Late in the year, he successfully negotiated the first two stages of PGA Tour qualifying school in California.[28][29]At the final stage in Florida, Lee shot rounds of 74-72-69-65-72-74 to finish T64.[30]His placing earned him fullNationwide Tourplaying rights, allowing him to plan a 35-event, two-tour itinerary for 2011.[31]

2011[edit]

Lee began a noticeable return to form a couple of months into the new year. A tie for 7th in theChitimacha Louisiana Openwas followed by a strong showing for 54 holes at theMalaysian Open,eventually being disqualified for signing an incorrect final round scorecard (denying him a tie for 17th).[32]The next week he tied for 2nd at theVolvo China Open,four shots behind winnerNicolas Colsaerts.[33]

In May, a tie for 5th in theStadion Classic at UGAwas followed by an outright third at theBMW Charity Pro-Am.

In June he injured his left wrist during anOpen Championshipqualifier, forcing his withdrawal and a four-week break from competition.[34]Diagnosed as tendonitis, he worked with his caddy in American events, Jeff Belen, on grip and swing adjustments.[35]By early September he had posted three further Nationwide Tour top-10 finishes, including a tie for 2nd at theCox Classic.

In early October Lee won theWNB Golf Classicin Texas, beatingHarris Englishin a playoff. The $94,500 first prize lifted him to 4th on the money list, assuring him of a place inside the final money list's top 25, those being the players who gain PGA Tour cards for the following season.

"It feels great to win again," Lee said. "I haven't won a tournament since I won the 2009 Johnnie Walker Classic and it's a great feeling. It's not easy to win and I worked really hard with my uncle and my coach (Bill Choung) for this. I'm really happy it worked."[36]Lee credited the switch to abelly putterin this event as beneficial, and came after pulling out of the previous week's event after 27 holes citing his wrist injury.[37]

Lee finished sixth on tour with earnings of $326,100,[38]making 13 of 18 cuts with nine top-10s. He had the season's lowest scoring average of 68.98.

2012[edit]

Lee entered the new season withPGA TourandEuropean Tourcards. He said he was still keen to play a two-tour schedule, however his main focus would be on America.[39]He made only 13 cuts in 26 events on the PGA Tour and lost his tour card. He did not play on the European Tour.

After striking up a successful partnership late in the Nationwide Tour season, Lee said he would have Australian Graeme Courts, a former long-time caddy ofLoren Roberts,working for him on the PGA Tour.[40]

K. J. Choiintroduced Lee to another Australian, Steve Bann, as a potential coach. "I am close with K.J. Choi and he said I was thinking too much about my swing," Lee said. "I was always working on something and I am too technical sometimes so K.J. introduced me to Steve. Steve is a simple guy who is teaching me how to practise with better routine and how to trust my own game and not think too much.[41]

2013[edit]

Lee played on theWeb.com Tourin 2013, finishing 15th on the regular season money list to regain his PGA Tour card for 2014. His best finish was second at theRex Hospital Open.

2014[edit]

On the back of six straight missed cuts, Lee adopted a claw putting grip for thePuerto Rico Openin March. He credited the change of putting style for yielding him an instant result; a runner-up finish, two shots behind winnerChesson Hadley.[42]

2015[edit]

In the 2015 PGA Tour fall season, Lee finished third at theOHL Classic at Mayakoba.In the spring, he finished seventh at theValspar Championshipand tenth at theCrowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial.He won his first PGA Tour event in July at theGreenbrier Classic.The next week he finished fourth at theJohn Deere Classic.In August he finished fourth at theQuicken Loans Nationaland sixth at theWGC-Bridgestone Invitational.With a runner-up finish at theTour Championship,he finished 9th in the FedEx Cup standings.

2019[edit]

In the2019 PGA Championship,Lee announced he was now working with golf coach George Gankas which was netting him a significant increase in length off his tee shots; especially his driver. He opened with a 64 (−6) and was only one offBrooks Koepka's lead.[43]He then followed with scores of 74, 71, and 77 to finish tied for 36th.

2020[edit]

At the2020 U.S. Open,Lee made the 36 holecut,but later withdrew from the championship after the third round citing a wrist injury; he had earlier taken sixputtsfrom close range on the final hole.[44]

2021[edit]

Lee played usingParsons Xtreme Golfequipment during the 2021 season following his departure fromTaylorMade.[45]

2023[edit]

Following his appearance at theGenesis Invitationalon thePGA Tourin February, Lee joinedLIV Golfahead of its second season.[46]

Amateur wins[edit]

Professional wins (4)[edit]

PGA Tour wins (1)[edit]

No. Date Tournament Winning score Margin of
victory
Runners-up
1 5 Jul2015 Greenbrier Classic −13 (63-69-68-67=267) Playoff CanadaDavid Hearn,United StatesKevin Kisner,
United StatesRobert Streb

PGA Tour playoff record (1–0)

No. Year Tournament Opponents Result
1 2015 Greenbrier Classic CanadaDavid Hearn,United StatesKevin Kisner,
United StatesRobert Streb
Won with par on second extra hole
Kisner and Streb eliminated by birdie on first hole

European Tour wins (1)[edit]

No. Date Tournament Winning score Margin of
victory
Runners-up
1 22 Feb2009 Johnnie Walker Classic1
(as an amateur)
−17 (67-68-69-67=271) 1 stroke ChileFelipe Aguilar,JapanHiroyuki Fujita,
EnglandRoss McGowan

1Co-sanctioned by theAsian Tourand thePGA Tour of Australasia

Nationwide Tour wins (1)[edit]

No. Date Tournament Winning score Margin of
victory
Runner-up
1 2 Oct2011 WNB Golf Classic −18 (64-72-68-66=270) Playoff United StatesHarris English

Nationwide Tour playoff record (1–0)

No. Year Tournament Opponent Result
1 2011 WNB Golf Classic United StatesHarris English Won with par on first extra hole

LIV Golf League wins (1)[edit]

No. Date Tournament Winning score Margin of
victory
Runners-up
1 19 Mar2023 LIV Golf Tucson1 −9 (68-67-69=204) Playoff South AfricaLouis Oosthuizen,MexicoCarlos Ortiz,
United StatesBrendan Steele

1Co-sanctioned by theMENA Tour

LIV Golf League playoff record (1–0)

No. Year Tournament Opponents Result
1 2023 LIV Golf Tucson South AfricaLouis Oosthuizen,MexicoCarlos Ortiz,
United StatesBrendan Steele
Won with birdie on second extra hole
Ortiz eliminated by par on first hole

Results in major championships[edit]

Results not in chronological order in 2020.

Tournament 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
Masters Tournament CUT T17
U.S. Open CUT T57
The Open Championship CUT CUT
PGA Championship T43 T56 CUT
Tournament 2019 2020 2021 2022
Masters Tournament
PGA Championship T36 T71
U.S. Open WD CUT
The Open Championship NT
Did not play

CUT = missed the half-way cut
"T" indicates a tie for a place
WD = withdrew
NT = No tournament due toCOVID-19 pandemic

Summary[edit]

Tournament Wins 2nd 3rd Top-5 Top-10 Top-25 Events Cuts made
Masters Tournament 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1
PGA Championship 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 4
U.S. Open 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 2
The Open Championship 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0
Totals 0 0 0 0 0 1 13 7
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 3 (twice)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 0

Results in The Players Championship[edit]

Tournament 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
The Players Championship CUT T35 CUT T7 CUT C CUT WD
Top 10

CUT = missed the halfway cut
"T" indicates a tie for a place
WD = withdrew
C = Cancelled after the first round due to theCOVID-19 pandemic

Results in World Golf Championships[edit]

Results not in chronological order before 2015.

Tournament 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Championship T42
Match Play T51
Invitational T51 T6 56
Champions T66 T58
Top 10
Did not play

QF, R16, R32, R64 = Round in which player lost in match play
"T" = tied

PGA Tour and European Tour career summary[edit]

PGA Tour European Tour
Season Wins Earnings ($) Money list Wins Earnings () Order of Merit
2009 0 359,846 n/a † 1 110,543 164
2010 0 0 0 88,257 159
2011 0 0 0 358,477 84
2012 0 359,112 166 0 0
2013 0 112,000 n/a † 0 0
2014 0 781,295 120 0 0
2015 1 3,965,933 11 0 233,265 n/a †
2016 0 1,405,722 75 0 477,951 n/a †
2017 0 1,611,331 68 0 0
2018 0 1,269,386 98 0 0
2019 0 1,524,126 75 0 43,178 n/a †
2020 0 2,043,764 40 0 16,292 n/a †
2021 0 347,862 183 0 0 n/a †
2022 0 1,265,934 102 0 0 n/a †
2023 0 316,795 118 0 0 n/a †
Career* 1 15,363,106 117 1 1,432,052 n/a

* Complete as of 20 February 2023.
† Lee was not ranked because he was not a member.

Team appearances[edit]

Amateur

Professional

Personal life[edit]

Lee married Yoomi Kong in 2017.[47]Together they have two children, Roi[48]and Robin.[49]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^"Week 07 2016 Ending 14 Feb 2016"(pdf).OWGR.Retrieved5 October2019.
  2. ^2008 U.S. AmateurArchived25 August 2008 at theWayback Machine- Meet The Quarterfinalists
  3. ^"Golf: Danny Lee now officially a Kiwi".The New Zealand Herald.2 September 2008.Retrieved17 June2018.
  4. ^"U.S. Amateur: Move over Tiger, Lee supplants Woods".Archived fromthe originalon 25 August 2008.Retrieved25 August2008.
  5. ^Danny Lee secures McCormack Medal after US Amateur win[permanent dead link]
  6. ^2008 Eisenhower Trophy, individual leaderboard
  7. ^"Danny Lee's $100m dilemma".The New Zealand Herald.4 January 2009.Retrieved13 January2011.
  8. ^http://www.golfstatresults.com/public/leaderboards/team/static/team1288.html2008 Eisenhower Trophy, team leaderboard
  9. ^"Lee wins Johnnie Walker Classic".Archived fromthe originalon 25 February 2009.Retrieved22 February2009.
  10. ^"Golf: Lee in dreamland after stunning win at Johnnie Walker Classic".The New Zealand Herald.22 February 2009.Retrieved27 September2011.
  11. ^"Lee pulls off upset win".Archived fromthe originalon 27 February 2009.Retrieved22 February2009.
  12. ^"Week 8 - Phil Mickelson Retains the Northern Trust Open Title and Moves up to World Number Three".Archived fromthe originalon 26 February 2009.Retrieved24 February2009.
  13. ^"Danny Lee ready to turn pro after Masters meltdown".The New Zealand Herald.11 April 2009.Retrieved13 January2011.
  14. ^World #1 Danny Lee Turns Pro
  15. ^Danny Lee joins Callaway
  16. ^"Lee trying to earn temporary status on Tour".Archived fromthe originalon 9 July 2009.Retrieved6 July2009.
  17. ^Lee qualifies for John Deere Classic[dead link]
  18. ^Lamport-Stokes, Mark (4 August 2009)."PGA Tour advice is good and bad for teenager Lee".Reuters.
  19. ^"Danny Lee reflects on last round mixture".Stuff.co.nz.31 August 2009.Retrieved27 September2011.
  20. ^"2009 Q-School application form"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 6 August 2009.Retrieved2 October2009.
  21. ^Q-School tournament info page: McKinney, TX
  22. ^Q-School leaderboard: McKinney, TX
  23. ^McGuire, Bernie (29 October 2009)."Lee switches focus to Europe".Stuff.co.nz.Retrieved27 September2011.
  24. ^"Lee signs coach with Tiger connections".Television New Zealand.29 October 2009. Archived fromthe originalon 6 October 2012.Retrieved27 September2011.
  25. ^McGuire, Bernie (18 May 2010)."New caddy, coach boost Danny Lee".Stuff.co.nz.Retrieved27 September2011.
  26. ^Remember Danny Lee?
  27. ^2010 European Tour results
  28. ^Q-School Stage 1 leaderboard
  29. ^Q-School Stage 2 leaderboard
  30. ^Q-School Final Stage leaderboardArchived12 December 2012 at theWayback Machine
  31. ^Davidson, Martin (1 April 2011)."Craig Perks warns Danny Lee over burnout".Stuff.co.nz.Retrieved27 September2011.
  32. ^"Danny Lee disqualified from Malaysian Open".Stuff.co.nz.19 April 2011.Retrieved27 September2011.
  33. ^"Danny Lee claims share of second in China".Stuff.co.nz.25 April 2011.Retrieved27 September2011.
  34. ^Wrist Injury a Worry for Danny Lee
  35. ^"Nationwide Tour's Rising Star" video
  36. ^"WNB Golf Classic R4 wrap-up".Archived fromthe originalon 5 October 2011.Retrieved3 October2011.
  37. ^"WNB Golf Classic, R1 wrap-up".Archived fromthe originalon 1 October 2011.Retrieved3 October2011.
  38. ^"2011 Money List – Nationwide Tour".PGA Tour.Retrieved6 December2016.
  39. ^Danny Lee learning his lessons
  40. ^"Lee could miss out playing NZ Open".NZPA.15 November 2011.Retrieved13 January2012.
  41. ^"Lee Turns to Aussie Coach".Australian Associated Press.13 January 2012.Retrieved13 January2012.
  42. ^"Danny Lee Riding Confidence at Copperhead".NPR.The Associated Press. 14 March 2014.Retrieved14 March2014.
  43. ^Myers, Alex (16 May 2019)."PGA Championship 2019: Surprise contender Danny Lee briefly contemplated quite the career change in 2017".Golf Digest.Retrieved1 October2019.
  44. ^Dethier, Dylan (20 September 2020)."Controversial U.S. Open 6-putt footage finally released (it's spectacular!)".Golf.com.Retrieved20 September2020.
  45. ^"PXG Pros & Ambassadors WITB - PGA & LPGA Tour Golfers | PXG".
  46. ^"Golf: Kiwi Danny Lee confirmed as new LIV Golf member".The New Zealand Herald.20 February 2023.Retrieved6 March2023.
  47. ^"Golf: Kiwi pro Danny Lee finds true love, fine form on the course".7 October 2023.
  48. ^@dannygolf72 (24 October 2018)."Welcome to the world Roi Theodore lee! 2018/10/21 3:14am 7.11 pound 20inch and mom is doing good! Thank you for all…"(Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  49. ^"Tied for lead for in Korea, Danny Lee's thoughts are with his premature baby".19 October 2019.

External links[edit]