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Mi Hyun Kim

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Nickname
  
Peanut, Kimmie

Name
  
Mi-Hyun Kim

Nationality
  
South Korea

Role
  
Golfer

LPGA tour wins
  
8


Residence
  
Height
  
1.55 m

Professional wins
  
21

LPGA of Korea Tour
  
13

Spouse
  
Lee Won-hee (m. 2008)

Turned professional
  
1996

Mi-Hyun Kim Mi Hyun Kim Pictures McDonald39s LPGA Championship

Born
  
13 January 1977 (age 47) Incheon, South Korea (
1977-01-13
)

Current tour(s)
  
LPGA Tour (joined 1999)KLPGA (joined 1996)

Education
  
Sungkyunkwan University

Mi Hyun Kim 2008 Kraft Nabisco


Mi-Hyun Kim (Korean: 김미현, born 13 January 1977) is a professional golfer from South Korea. She turned professional in 1996 and won 11 events on the LPGA of Korea Tour (KLPGA) between 1996 and 2000. In 1999, she joined the LPGA Tour and was named was Rookie of the Year that year. She has won eight LPGA events with her best finish in a major championship second place at the 2001 Women's British Open.

Contents

Mi-Hyun Kim MiHyun Kim A Tribute To A Retiring LPGA Star Fairways

Mi Hyun Kim Donates $100,000 to tornado victims


Background

Mi-Hyun Kim MiHyun Kim A Tribute To A Retiring LPGA Star Fairways

Born in Incheon on Kim received the nicknamed "Peanut" because she stands only 5 feet 1 inch (155 cm) tall. LPGA golfers also refer to her as "Kimmy." Kim was inspired to move to the United States by Se Ri Pak, and they along with Grace Park and Hee-Won Han – the four nicknamed the "Seoul Sisters" – are considered pioneers in the surge of outstanding South Korean women's golfers on the LPGA Tour. Her swing is characterized by an unusually long backswing that has become shorter in recent years.

Charitable giving

Mi-Hyun Kim wwwseoulsisterscomphotos202007SemGroupimages

In May 2007, Kim donated $100,000 of her $210,000 prize money from winning the SemGroup Championship to victims of a recent tornado that severely damaged the town of Greensburg, Kansas. The tornado occurred during the SemGroup tournament.

Mi-Hyun Kim peanutfarr06rd4showballjpgjpg

Kim did not have any connection to Greensburg or any of its residents. Commenting on her donation, she said, "Honestly, I made a lot of money in the United States on the LPGA Tour. Most of time, I get the money here and donate to South Korea. But, I want to help people here, too. The win was a surprise for me and I think God gave it to me like a special present or he is using me like, 'okay, I give you this, but after that you give to help the people.'"

Mi-Hyun Kim Mi Hyun Kim Photos SemGroup Championship Presented By

A year later on the eve on the 2008 SemGroup Championship, the president of the United Way of the Plains in Wichita, Kansas appeared with Kim at the pre-tournament press conference to publicly thank her and announce that the publicity surrounding Kim's donation had spurred further donations totaling $1.2 million and that money is being used to build 25 homes for low- and moderate-income individuals displaced by the tornado.

Personal

Kim retired from the LPGA Tour after playing several tournaments during the 2011 season. In December 2008 she married Lee Won-hee, a former Olympic gold medalist in judo who now teaches judo at a university in South Korea. In 2009 they had a son, Ye Sung Lee, who was born in Orlando, Florida. She currently teaches golf in South Korea. A golf teaching/practice facility built by her father is named the Mi-Hyun Kim Golf World.

LPGA Tour (8)

LPGA Tour playoff record (3-3)

LPGA of Korea Tour wins (13)

Tournaments in bold denotes major tournaments in KLPGA

Results in LPGA majors

^ The Women's British Open replaced the du Maurier Classic as an LPGA major in 2001.
DNP = did not play
CUT = missed the half-way cut
"T" tied
Yellow background for a top-10 finish.

Summary

  • Starts – 48
  • Wins – 0
  • 2nd-place finishes – 1
  • 3rd-place finishes – 1
  • Top 3 finishes – 2
  • Top 5 finishes – 4
  • Top 10 finishes – 13
  • Top 25 finishes – 19
  • Missed cuts – 9
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 16
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 3
  • Team appearances

    Amateur

  • Espirito Santo Trophy (representing South Korea): 1994
  • References

    Mi-Hyun Kim Wikipedia