Updated: January, 2024

HYE JIN CHOI

The Facts

Birthday: August 23, 1999
Rookie Year on LPGA: 2022
Birthplace: South Korea
Best LPGA Finish: 2nd (twice)
Best LPGA Major Finish: 2nd (2017 US Women's Open)
Best Score: 63 (2022 CP (Canadian) Women's Open)
Best Scoring Average: 69.72 (2022)
Best Season Money Total: $2,075,696 (2022)
Best Season Money List Position: 6th (2022)
Most Top Tens/Season: 10 (2022)
Rookie of the Year Finish: 2nd

Height: 5' 6"
2024 LPGA Status: Category 1
Nicknames: Penguin
Sponsors: Lotte
How's her English?: Unknown
Road to the LPGA: Finished t-8th at 2021 Q-Series to earn full status on the LPGA in 2022.

Capsule Bio

Hye Jin Choi burst onto the international golf scene as a teenage amateur. She was already a member of the Korean national team in her mid-teens.

2015 was a great year for Choi. In the amateur ranks, she led the Korean team to a resounding victory at the World Junior Girls Championship in September. Meanwhile, she won the individual title by seven shots.

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Choi also had some great performances playing in pro events. Though she missed the cut at her first LPGA event, the Lotte Championship, she took a three shot lead after two rounds at the Lotte event on the KLPGA the previous week. She ended up tied for fourth. She also finished tenth at the BC Card event in June and 6th at the Hanwha Classic in September.

Choi continued to shine in 2016. She contended all week at the New Zealand Open, finishing tied for 2nd behind world #1 Lydia Ko. She qualified for the ANZ Ladies Masters by shooting a 62, then finished tied for 5th in the actual event. She also managed a tie for 38th at the LPGA's Australian Women's Open and tied for 52nd at the Lotte event in Hawaii.

In the amateur world, she won the single title at the 2016 World Amateur Team Championship (the Espirito Santo Cup) while leading Korea to a dominating win in the team championship. She also collected the Canadian Women's Amateur title by four shots. She made it to the semifinals at the US Girls Junior, but lost to Andrea Lee of the US. In professional golf, she was the low amateur at the 2016 US Women's Open and the 2016 Hyundai China Ladies Open.

Choi continued her torrid play in 2017. She won the Australian Ladies Amateur in March but lost to fellow Korean So Mi Lee in the New South Wales Amateur final. She also made a top five at the Oates Vic Open, a pro event on the ALPG tour, and followed that with a tie for 7th finish at the Australian Women's Open, an LPGA event; this was her first top ten at an LPGA tournament.

But nothing prepared people for what happened at that year's US Women's Open. Choi was utterly brilliant, contending all week, and as the last few holes unfolded, she amazingly took the lead. If Choi had won, she would have become the youngest player to ever win the Open, and only the second amateur. Alas, it was not to be: on the 16th hole, she hit her tee shot in the water, allowing Sung Hyun Park to overtake her and eventually win the title. But Choi's second place finish was still astounding.

Choi's performance at the Open got her invited to the Evian, where she finished tied for 14th. But she also around that time won her first KLPGA tournament, shooting a final round 63 to capture the ChoJung Sparkling Water Open in July. Not long after that, she captured a second win at the Bogner-MBN Ladies Open. Finally after that, she decided in August to turn pro and actually earn some money! She did so, playing the rest of the year on the KLPGA with the occasional guest appearance on the LPGA.

At the end of the year, Choi played in the special LF Point Queen of Queens, a tournament where only the top players on the KLPGA were allowed to participate. She won that title as well, her first as a pro, although it didn't count as an official KLPGA win.

Choi wasted no time making more noise in 2018. She won her very first event as an official member of the KLPGA, the Hyosung Championship, which took place in Vietnam. By May, she was second on the money list, with an additional second and fourth place finish to go along with her win.

Choi wound up easily winning the Rookie of the Year award in 2018, more than doubling the total points of her nearest competitor. She also won the Player of the Year, the first woman to win both awards on the KLPGA since Jiyai Shin did it in 2006. And she was selected Most Popular Player by the fans.

Choi finished 4th on the money list, earning over 822 million won. She was also second in scoring average. She made an incredible 16 top tens on the year. She had two wins, her second coming at the BC Card Ladies Cup in June. She also had three seconds, three thirds and three fourth place results.

Choi also played a few times on the LPGA. Her highlight was a runner-up finish to Jin Young Ko at the Australian Women's Open. She also played at the ANA, but did not have a great result there. She also missed the cut at the Women's British Open, and finished tied for 27th at the US Women's Open.

Choi played for the KLPGA team at the OrangeLife Champions Trophy. She teamed with Ji Hyun Oh to lose an epic match to So Yeon Ryu and Inbee Park 1 up, squared a match teamed with Seung Hyun Lee against Inbee and Jeong Eun Lee 5, and lost her singles match against Sung Hyun Park.

Hye Jin Choi dominated the KLPGA in 2019, winning pretty much every award she was qualified for. She claimed the Player of the Year and had the low scoring average with 70.45. She led the money list with over 1,207,000,000 won, one of the few players in history to break a billion won for a season. She had the most wins of the season with five, and was even named Most Popular player by the fans. In short, 2019 was the year of Hye Jin Choi.

Choi's first win of the year was also her most important. She claimed the KLPGA Championship, one of the tour's five Majors, in late April. It was also her first career Major win. She followed that a few weeks later with a win at the NH Ladies Championship. In all, she had 13 top ten, including 2 seconds and a third. One of her runner-up finishes came at the Hite Cup, which almost became her second Major of the year. Another came to Rookie of the Year Ayean Cho at the Pak Se Ri Invitational.

Choi also played several times overseas. She had a tie for 5th finish at the Lotte Championship in April. She only finished tied for 49th at the Evian and missed the cut at the Women's British Open.

Choi played for the winning KLPGA team at the OrangeLife Team Championship at the end of the year. She teamed with rookie star Hee Jeong Lim to trounce Inbee Park and Danielle Kang 4 & 2, but lost when teamed with Da Yeon Lee against Jeongeun Lee6 and Jenny Shin. She lost her singles match against LPGA superstar Jin Young Ko, a battle of the top players on both tours, 5 & 3. The KLPGA won the event 15-9.

Hye Jin started out 2020 well. When Ayean Cho collapsed in the final round, Hye Jin made a great run for the title at the Vic Open, just missing it with a tie for 2nd result. The next week she struggled, finishing only tied for 48th at the Women's Australian Open. She also had a top ten in Vietnam in the only event she played on the KLPGA before the Covid pandemic halted the tour.

Once the tour restarted in mid-May, Choi played consistently for the rest of the year. Out of 17 starts, she managed 15 top tens, although she only won once, at the final event of the year (she did have a second tournament where she finished first, but that was unofficial because rain forced it to be reduced to just one round). Besides the wins, her best finishes were a pair of thirds. She wound up making 538 million won, 6th on the money list, but still won the Player of the Year for the third straight year thanks to her consistency. She was also third in scoring average.

In December, Choi played at the US Women's Open, but only finished tied for 30th. Choi also played for the KLPGA team at the annual LPGA/KLPGA team competition, the OrangeLife Champions Trophy. She teamed with Hyun Kyung Park to beat Na Yeon Choi and Mi Hyang Lee 3 & 2. In an epic battle, she lost singles to So Yeon Ryu 3 & 1. Nonetheless, the KLPGA won the match, 10.5 to 7.5.

2021 was Hye Jin's weakest season to date, though still strong by most standards. For the first time in her KLPGA career, she failed to win Player of the Year, and also failed to win any events. She finished just T-41st at the BMW Championship, her only LPGA event of the year. However, she still made 12 top tens, including two runner-up finishes. She finished 11th on the money list. Da Yeon Lee ran away with the Hanwha Classic, winning by five over Hye Jin. She came much closer at the ELCRU-TV Chosun Celebrity event in September. She wound up in a playoff with Hae Ran Ryu. Both got close to the green on the second playoff hole, but only Ryu got up and down.

Hye Jin ended the year in style. She went to LPGA Q-Series, a two week qualifier for the LPGA tour. After the first week, she was in great shape, solo second place. She was far more mediocre in the second week, but still easily earned a card, finishing 8th in the end. At long last she was to be a rookie on the LPGA!

Her rookie year was indeed really strong. She made over $2 million on the year (6th on the money list) with ten top tens and several near misses for wins. Despite that, she still lost the Rookie of the Year to the Thai teenager Attaya Thitikul, who won twice and was briefly the number one player in the world. But that should take nothing away from Choi, who was sensational. Among her highlights was a great performance at the US Women's Open, where she finished 3rd, and the KPMG Women's PGA Championship, where she was in the final group on Sunday but faded towards the end to a tie for 5th. Her other three Majors were all top 30 finishes.

She also contended in Korea at the BMW Championship, but Lydia Ko was too strong that week and Choi finished third. Choi came closest to winning at the CP Canadian Women's Open, grabbing a tie for 2nd. She had several great chances on the back nine but couldn't make the putts she needed, and the winner was an unheralded South African name Paula Reto, ironically the second time a South African had beaten a Korean star for a national championship in 2022 (the other time being Buhai's win over In Gee Chun at the British Open).

Hye Jin finished the year playing the Singapore Open on the KLPGA. She managed a t-18th in the rain shortened event.

Hye Jin strggled a lot more in the 2023 season, finishing just 38th on the money list with about $747,000 earned. She had only two top tens all year on the LPGA, with a solo 17th at the Chevron Championship her best finish in a Major. She also played on the International Crown team when Min Ji Park, who qualified ahead of her, decided to skip it. But the team did not do well, failing to earn a point in the first two matches before sweeping the final match against Japan. This was not good enough, though, and for the first time the Korean team was not able to get out of the preliminary round.

Hye Jin also played several events on the KLPGA. At the Lotte Open in June, she moved into a three-shot lead after three rounds and held on for her first win in two years. She also had the solo lead after two rounds at the Hana Bank Championship but sank to a tie for 14th by the end. She also notched a t-7th finish at the E1 Charity Open.

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