As a youngster, In Gee Chun was a math prodigy
with a genius level IQ. When she was 11, she went with her
dad to a driving range. Her dad challenged her to hit a shot;
she did, badly, and her dad's friend laughed at her. Determined,
she spent the rest of the day practicing, and fell in love
with the sport.
In the end, golf won out over academics. Chun
became a mainstay of the Korean national team as a teenager;
where she was a contemporary of stars like Hyo Joo Kim, Kyu
Jung Baek and Min Sun Kim.
Chun's most notable achievement in pro golf
before 2013 was at the 2011 Hite Cup. So Yeon Ryu had the
lead after two rounds, but a weird rules infraction threw
her off her game, and Chun took advantage. She grabbed the
third round lead and hung onto it most of the fourth day.
But a late triple bogey did her in, allowing another KLPGA
star, Ha Neul Kim, to take the Major title from the still
amateur Chun.
Her family hit some rough financial times,
and she was forced to turn pro at the age of 17 to help her
family with money. In Gee turned pro in 2012 and played minor
league tours her first year. She joined the KLPGA in 2013
for her rookie year. That year, all the attention was on fellow
rookie Hyo Joo Kim, who many believed was the next superstar
in Korean golf. Kim did get out to a good start, winning her
second event as a KLPGA member and establishing a large lead
in the Rookie of the Year race. But Chun came on strong in
the Spring. Her breakout event was the Doosan Match Play.
She made it all the way to the finals, where she lost to eventual
Player of the Year Ha Na Jang. Chun finally had her moment
the next month at the Korean Women's Open. Paired in the final
round with Kim and another teen star, Kyu Jung Baek, Chun
made birdie on the final four holes to win the event by a
shot. This moved her to within 100 points of Kim for the Rookie
of the Year, and the battle was on!
For the rest of the year, the two duked it
out, each collecting many great achievements. Chun came within
a putt of winning the year's second Major, the KLPGA Championship,
but finished second. She also finished second to Jang again
at the Rush and Cash Classic. Alas, an injury in the year's
penultimate event took her out for the rest of the year, but
she still gave Kim all she could ask for before Kim wrapped
up the top Rookie honors.
In all, it was a fabulous first year for Chun.
She didn't miss a cut, finishing no worse than 33rd all year.
She had nine top tens including the Major win. She finished
third on the money list, second for Rookie of the Year, and
top five in scoring average and Player of the Year.
(And for those who are wondering, her nickname
'Dumbo' comes from her tendency to keep her ears open at all
times, hearing everything around her, like an elephant. It's
not a comment on the size of her ears!).
After coming back from her injury, Chun continued
her brilliance with a fantastic 2014 season. Although she
would not win a Major, she managed three wins during the year,
starting with a victory at the S-OIL Invitational. At the
KDB Daewoo Financial Classic, she had a riveting battle with
Ha Neul Kim, eventually beating her in a playoff when Kim
hit her approach into the water. And Chun ended the season
with a third win at the Chosun-Ilbo Posco Championship, beating
another KLPGA star, Yoon Kyung Heo, in a battle that went
down to the final hole.
Chun finished the KLPGA season 4th on the
money list with roughly 617 million won earned and 8 top tens.
She rose to 19th in the world rankings by year's end.
Though she had a fantastic year on the KLPGA,
her most memorable moment of 2014 came at the KEB Hana Bank
Championship, an LPGA event. After a weak first round, she
climbed the leaderboard the next two days, then seized the
lead on the back nine on Sunday. She had a putt to win but
missed, winding up in a playoff with Kyu Jung Baek and Brittany
Lincicome. Alas, Chun hit an iron in the water during the
playoff, and Baek won. But her tie for second showed she is
ready to contend on the LPGA level.
In Gee Chun had a monster season in 2015,
one of the best a Korean golfer has ever amassed. She was
helped by the exodus of KLPGA stars to the LPGA and JLPGA,
but she not only dominated the KLPGA in 2015, she also won
on the JLPGA and LPGA tours, establishing herself as an international
star and earning full membership on the LPGA for 2016.
Chun started the year playing in a few LPGA
events, where she made all the cuts but never finished inside
the top 20. Upon returning to Korea, it took her just two
events to get her first win, at the rain-shortened Samchully
Together Open in mid-April. But it was her next win that really
set the pace for her year. She was invited to play at the
JLPGA's first Major of the year, the Salonpas Cup. Chun had
never played on the JLPGA before, but she staked herself to
a five shot lead after three rounds and cruised to her first
win on that tour. It was also her first win outside the KLPGA
as a pro, but it wouldn't be her last!
Chun returned to Korea, and just a few weeks
later, stormed to the victory at the Doosan Match Play Championship.
She had to win six matches, and only one was a rout. Two went
to the final hole, two more ended in playoffs, and the other
went to the 17th hole. In the final round against Han Sol
Ji, she had an ace and won the event 1up.
In mid-June, Chun successfully defended her
title at the S-OIL Champions Invitational. It was her third
win of the year, and the first time she ever defended a title.
In Gee continued her jetsetting ways. She
flew to Pennsylvania, where she spent a couple of weeks preparing
for the US Women's Open in Lancaster. Her work paid dividends.
With caddie Dean Herden on her bag (the caddie who had led
Jiyai Shin and So Yeon Ryu to Major wins in the past), Chun
put herself into contention on Sunday. Then, while leader
Amy Yang struggled to remain on top, In Gee made her move.
She birdied the tough 15th hole to move into the lead, made
birdie on the drivable par 4, then birdied the par 3 17th
hole by hitting a gutsy iron directly at the tucked pin. By
the time she reached 18, she had a three shot lead.
But Yang struck back, making eagle on 16 after
driving the green, then birdie on 17. In Gee missed a par
save on 18 and had to wait to see what Yang would do. Yang
missed the fairway on 18, but punched out and got her third
shot within 9 feet of the hole. She had to make the par save
to force a playoff, but she missed, and In Gee Chun, at 20
years of age, became the third youngest woman to ever win
the US Women's Open. The win earned her a tour card for the
LPGA in 2016. It was the third time that she had made her
first win on a tour a Major (she had won the Korean Women's
Open as her first win on the KLPGA in 2013, and the Salonpas
on the JLPGA in May).
In Gee continued to cruise. A few weeks later,
she won the KLPGA's third Major of the season, the Hite Cup,
which also happened to be sponsored by her primary sponsor.
That was her third Major of the season, and thus she became
the first woman golfer to win Majors on three different tours
in the same year.
In October, In Gee returned to Japan to play
at the Japan Women's Open. This time she had a much more difficult
battle for the title. She wound up in a playoff with Erika
Kikuchi and Mi Hyang Lee, but in the end, Chun once again
got the win, her FOURTH Major of the year, and second out
of two tries in Japan.
And she STILL wasn't done. A few weeks later,
she added the KLPGA's fourth Major of the year to her resume,
the KB Star Finale. In Gee thus won eight times in 2015, five
of which were Majors! An absolutely scorching season. And
of course, she finished first on the KLPGA money list with
over 913 million won earned, the second most in history. She
also won the scoring average title by more than half a stroke,
and the Player of the Year.
In Gee capped off the year by playing well
at the Kowa Queens Team tournament, where she went 2 and 1,
and the Hyundai China Open, where she notched a 4th.
In Gee Chun had a superlative rookie season
on the LPGA tour in 2016. She joined the ever-growing ranks
of Korean stars who won that tour's Rookie of the Year award,
but did it in particularly dominating fashion. Her 1,378 points
was close to three times what the second ranked rookie achieved.
She started the year with a bang, carding
a third place, then a second place finish in her first two
starts. However, while arriving in the airport for her third
event, she was injured in a freak accident caused when Ha
Na Jang's father released a hard suitcase. The case tumbled
down an escalator and struck Chun in the lower back. She was
forced to miss several events to recover, but when she returned
at the ANA Inspiration, she was still brilliant. Indeed, her
birdie on the final hole got her briefly into a tie for the
lead, before Lydia Ko tapped in for the birdie and the win.
Chun followed that runner-up finish with another two weeks
later at the Lotte Championship. Four tournaments, four top
three finishes.
Chun cooled off after that, and only had a
few highlights over the next few months. But she still played
well enough to qualify for both the Olympics and the International
Crown. She would finish tied for 13th in Rio and struggled
a tad at the Crown, with South Korea finishing second to the
US in that event.
But In Gee returned to form with an 8th place
at the Women's British Open, then followed that with a jaw-dropping
wire-to-wire win at the Evian Championship, the year's final
Major. Her 21 under par total was the lowest ever achieved
with relation to par in a Major, male or female. She won by
four shots over fellow Korean stars So Yeon Ryu and Sung Hyun
Park, who finished tied for second. Chun became only the second
woman, after Korean legend Se Ri Pak, to make her first two
LPGA wins Majors.
Chun would not win again in 2016, but she
played consistently well, rapidly closing the gap between
her and Lydia Ko for scoring average. By the time they reached
the year's final event, the CME Group Tour Championship, they
were virtually tied, and the lead changed hands several times
over the four days. With one hole to go, and playing in the
same group, Ko's lead was an insanely small .001 strokes.
Chun birdied the final hole, Ko parred, and by the slimmest
of margins, Chun won the Vare Trophy. She became only the
second women's golfer to win the Rookie of the Year and Vare
Trophy in the same year, after Hall of Famer Nancy Lopez.
In Gee also tried defending her titles at
the Hite Cup and the Japan Women's Open; she finished fourth
in both. She tried to defend at the KB Star Final as well,
but her injured back flared up and she had to drop out.
Chun spent the final month of the year studying
for her final college exams so as to wrap up her college career.
She still found time to donate 100 million won to her alma
mater Korea University, so they could start a charitable program
to assist the elderly and poor. In Gee hopes to participate
in charitable activities in the future with this new program.
2017 was another strong season for In Gee,
but wins eluded her. She managed ten top tens, including five
runner-up finishes and two thirds. Her best events included
the Cambia Classic, where she battled Stacy Lewis all day
but ended up one shot short (but five shots ahead of third
place). She also excelled at the Manulife, where she lost
in a playoff to Ariya Jutanugarn; and the KEB Hana Bank, where
she had an epic battle against KLPGA star Jin Young Ko and
Rookie of the Year Sung Hyun Park in front of thousands of
fans. In the end, she broke 1 1/4 million dollars for the
year despite not winning, and her scoring average of 69.41
was third best in the league. She got as high as third in
the world, and finished the year with a world ranking of 5.
In Gee also had trouble with her main sponsorship.
Her long time affiliation with Hite Beer came to an end early
in the year, and she spent the rest of the season with the
front of her cap blank. Finally, in late December, she wrapped
up a deal with KB Financial group.
In Gee played well on the LPGA team at the
ING Champions, winning both her singles and team matches.
At the end of 2017, she got given a chance to run the Olympic
torch relay for the Winter Olympics, which were to take place
in February in her homeland.
In Gee's 2018 season was by far the weakest
of her three LPGA seasons to date. It wasn't a terrible year;
she still earned about $741,000, and her scoring average of
70.20 was 12th in the league. But she had only 4 top tens
all year, none in Majors.
Her best early season result came at the Kingsmill
Championship. It was rain-shortened, and In Gee led after
two rounds. She wound up in a playoff with Japan's Nasa Hataoka
and Thailand's Ariya Jutanugarn, who won.
In Gee did not qualify for the International
Crown, but Inbee Park decided not to play, and the next two
qualified players did not want to play, either, so In Gee
was named to the team. To add pressure, the event was taking
place in South Korea. Although In Gee was not in great form,
she played specatularly at the Crown. Teaming with So Yeon
Ryu, she won all three team matches, then beat Anna Nordqvist
in the singles. Korea won the Crown, and In Gee was the only
player to win all her matches.
The next week was the KEB Hana Bank. In Gee
played great to set herself up on the weekend, then shot 66-66
to take the title, her first in more than two years. She was
overwhelmed with emotion to finally win again, and in her
home country to boot.
In Gee also played the OrangeLife Champions,
a team battle pitting the KLPGA and LPGA. She teamed with
Danielle Kang and Jenny Shin to win. In the singles, In Gee
took on top KLPGA star Jeong Eun Lee 6. It was a great match,
and they were all square when they reached the final hole.
Lee missed the green but pitched in for birdie to take the
match. Nonetheless, the LPGA still beat the KLPGA 13-11.
2019 was the weakest year In Gee had on the
LPGA to date. She had only two top tens all season: a third
place at the BMW Championship in Korea, and a tie for 6th
at the Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational, a team event, where
she paired with Lydia Ko. Her world ranking dropped to 47th
by year's end. She made around $270,000 for the entire year,
good for just 67th on the money list. In Gee did not qualify
to play on the LPGA team at the OrangeLife Champions, nor
did she get into the field at the CME Group Tour Championship.
Her main worry seemed to be her driving distance, which dropped
to one of the shortest on tour.
In 2020, the whole world was rocked by the
Covid-19 pandemic. The LPGA and KLPGA tours canceled and postponed
many tournaments. In Gee stayed in Korea much of the summer,
but didn't play at any KLPGA events. She returned to the States
in late July, but her best results came in the UK in mid-August.
She finished 7th in back-to-back weeks at the Scottish and
British Women's Opens. Amazingly, this was the first time
she had had consecutive top tens in years, and her first top
ten at a Major since she won the Evian in 2016!
In Gee had a decent year, a slight comeback
from 2019. She made $301,000 in 15 events, good for 37th on
the money list.
In Gee made a big comeback in 2021. She started
the year with three straight top tens, more than she had made
in the any of the three previous years, and managed 8 top
tens total for the year. She earned over $750,000, finishing
25th on the money list. She moved from 62nd to 35th in the
world rankings during the year. Although she didn't win, she
did play very consistently. In fact, with two events remaining,
she was leading the Vare Trophy race; everyone ahead of her
would not be able to play enough rounds to qualify. However,
Lydia Ko changed her schedule at the last minute, did make
just enough rounds, and took the Vare Trophy. Still, In Gee's
69.63 average was 7th in the league and 3rd among those who
qualified.
In Gee was not as consistent in 2022 as she
was in 2021, but when she played well, she played really great.
She started the season with a bang by contending at the HSBC
Women's World Championship in early March. She got into the
final round match up with world #1 Jin Young Ko and Jeongeun
Lee6. It was the first time she had had a third round lead
since the 2016 Evian. She didn't quite bring it on Sunday,
alas, but still finished tied for 2nd. She continued to rack
up mostly top 25 finishes the next few months, including a
tie for 15th at the US Women's Open.
In late June, however, she had one of the
greatest rounds of her entire life. The year's third Major,
the KPMG Women's PGA Championship, was being played at Congressional
outside Washington DC, and it was set up hard. But somehow
In Gee lit the place up, making nine birdies and one bogey
for a 64. This gave her an unbelievable 5 shot lead after
the first round, and her score differential against the field
was 11.38, one of the best in Major history. She was absolutely
on fire.
She had a strong second round to increase
her lead to six, but struggled on the weekend. She lost her
lead for a few holes to Lexi Tompson on Sunday, but she hung
in there, and when Thompson missed a few short putts, In Gee
was there to make the clutch shots. She won the tournament
by a stroke. She became only the third Korean to win three
Majors, and now needed just either the British or the Chevron
Championshp to complete the Grand Slam. Her gap of six years
between Majors was one of the longest of any Korean, tying
So Yeon Ryu for her gap between the 2011 US Women's Open and
2017 ANA Championship.
In Gee would immediately make a run at the
Grand Slam. At the AIG Women's British Open, played for the
first time at Muirfield, In Gee took the second round lead.
She played decently in round 3, but unheralded South African
Ashley Buhai had a fantastic round and took a five-shot lead
into the final day. In Gee was a group ahead of her on Sunday,
but didn't give up and cut the lead to two by the turn. Buhai
still looked poised to easily win, but stumbled with a triple
on 15 and suddenly the tournament was tied. In Gee was not
able to close it out, though, and they wound up in a playoff.
She had a great out from a greenside bunker on the first playoff
hole, but on the fourth put her tee shot into a pot bunker
and made bogey, losing the event to Buhai. Her solo second
was still her best result in the tournament, but it does sting
that she was so close to a truly epic achievement and just
missed out.
Amazingly, those three top twos were In Gee's
only top tens of the year. But she had a fairly solid year
overall: she was t-12th at the Chevron, t-22nd at the Evian
and t-15th at the US Women's Open in addition to her win and
second place at the other two Majors. She had a total of 12
top 25 finishes. As a result, her world ranking climbed to
8th, the highest she had been since 2017. She set a new personal
record for most money earned in a season, breaking $2.6 million,
and finished third on the money list, her highest ever placing.
By January, she was the second highest ranked Korean behind
only Jin Young Ko.
She also played at the KB Star Championship
on the KLPGA, where she finished 23rd.
At the end of the year, In Gee's peers on
the LPGA gave her the Founders Award, given to the player
who best examplifies the spirit of the founders of the tour.
It was well deserved. In Gee then returned to Korea, where
she held an exhibit of her artwork called Bird Meets Dumbo.
She had started painting the previous year and had become
obsessed with it. By late 2022, she had enough artwork to
have a show. Any proceeds from people visiting or buying her
paintings would go to the Lancaster Scholarship fund she had
founded.
2023 was arguably the weakest season In Gee
had since joining the LPGA. She managed only a single top
ten all year, a tie for 8th at the Canadian Women's Open.
She only had a few other top 20s. She still made enough money
to finish 58th on the money list and maintain her full status
on the LPGA.
She also played in the International Crown
in May but, whereas she had been the MVP in Korea's win in
2018, this week the entire team struggled. They were swept
by Australia and Thailand before sweeping Japan, but were
not able to gain enough points to make it to the final four
for the first time ever.
On the KLPGA, she played at her sponsor's
tournament, the KB Star Championship, finishing tied for 54th.
The biggest highlight of her year came at
two of the Majors. She made an ace on the 17th hole during
round 3 at the year's first Major, the Chevron Championship.
Chevron had made a pledge that they would donate to charity
a million dollars in the name of the first player who made
an ace, so the famously charitable Chun made that happen.
A few months later, she made a second ace at a Major, this
time in the final round of the US Women's Open at Pebble Beach
(on the 5th hole). In Gee high-fived dozens of fans as she
walked to collect her ball from the hole.
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