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South Korean golfer
Birdie Kim
(
Korean
:
김주연
; born
Ju-Yun Kim
26 August 1981, in
Iksan
) is a South Korean professional golfer. Her career highlight is winning the
2005 U.S. Women's Open
at
Cherry Hills Country Club
. In the last round, she was tied for the lead on the 18th hole with amateurs
Morgan Pressel
and
Brittany Lang
. Her second shot found a green-side bunker. She holed out from the bunker to take the lead and ultimately won by two strokes.
Kim won the 1998?99 Korea Junior Championship. She turned professional in November 2000 and joined the
Futures Tour
, which is the second-tier women's golf tour in the United States, in 2001. Her rookie season on the main
LPGA Tour
was 2004, and was not successful as she only made three cuts in 20 events, but she retained her tour card by finishing tied 12th at the Qualifying School. She did somewhat better in early 2005, and picked up her first top ten finish that May, but her victory at the U.S. Women's Open was totally unexpected.
She changed her first name to
Birdie
in 2004, in an effort to distinguish herself from the numerous other Korean golfers named Kim in the women's golf world in the minds of non-Koreans.
[1]
Kim is a common surname in Korea, especially on the LPGA Tour.
In 2005, Kim earned a total of $715,006 and came in 13th for LPGA season money position. She married fellow pro golfer Bae Kyu Lee in December 2007.
A 2009 car accident derailed Kim's career and she had trouble making cuts on the LPGA. In 2012, she played in 12 events on the
Symetra Tour
, finishing second on the money list. Kim last played an LPGA-sanctioned event in 2015. Like
Janet Alex
in 1982 and
Hilary Lunke
in 2003, the U.S. Open was her only LPGA Tour win.
Professional wins
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LPGA Tour wins (1)
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Legend
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LPGA Tour major championships (1)
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Other LPGA Tour (0)
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Futures Tour wins
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- 2001 Chumash Casino Futures Classic, Southwestern Bell Futures Classic
- 2003 Bank of Ann Arbor Futures Classic
Major championships
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Wins (1)
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Results timeline
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Results not in chronological order before 2015.
^ The Evian Championship was added as a major in 2013.
Win
Top 10
Did not play
CUT = missed the half-way cut
"T" = tied
Summary
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- Starts ? 26
- Wins ? 1
- 2nd-place finishes ? 0
- 3rd-place finishes ? 0
- Top 3 finishes ? 1
- Top 5 finishes ? 1
- Top 10 finishes ? 1
- Top 25 finishes ? 3
- Missed cuts ? 20
- Most consecutive cuts made ? 2 (thrice)
- Longest streak of top-10s ? 1
Team appearances
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Professional
References
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External links
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† event won in a playoff; ‡ winner held lead wire-to-wire; # event won by an amateur; ∞ event won in match-play
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