Updated: March, 2024

HEE JEONG LIM

The Facts

Birthday: September 2, 2000
Birthplace: South Korea
Best LPGA Finish:
2nd (2021 BMW Championship)
Best LPGA Major Finish:
CUT (twice)
Height: 5' 5"
2024 LPGA Status: On KLPGA Tour
Nicknames: Fennec (a kind of fox)
How's her English?: Learning
Sponsors: Hanwha
Road to the LPGA: On KLPGA

Capsule Bio

Hee Jeong Lim was born in 2000 and first burst onto the national scene in Korea at age 15. She mostly played her amateur golf in the country, winning a few tournaments here and there. She turned pro and joined the KLPGA tour in 2019.

Lim almost immediately became one of the top players on the KLPGA tour. She finished 10th in her first ever event as a tour member, then 4th in her third event. She notched a bunch of top tens in her first six months, but was not able to get a win. The class of 2019 was a fantastic rookie group, and though she was consistently among the top five rookies early on, she was still chasing the top players at that point.

However, in the second half of 2019, Lim caught fire, charging hard at top rookie Ayean Cho. She achieved her first win at the High Won Resorts Women's Open in August. Just a month later she won again, achieving her second career win before Cho got hers. However, Cho won her second time the very next week to hold Lim off. It was clear that the two were staging an epic battle for top rookie honors.

Lim kept on coming. She won her third event and first Major at the KB Star Championship. She then surged into contention at the LPGA's BMW Championship, one of three rookies in the hunt for the title that week. She wound up sixth. She finished the season with a second and third, but despite amassing an incredible 2,532 rookie points, she still only finished second to Cho for Rookie of the Year.

In all, Lim made more than 875 million won for the year, good for 4th on the money list. She was sixth in scoring average and 5th in the Player of the Year race. She had 12 top tens, which included three wins, a second, a third and a fourth.

Lim also played for the KLPGA team at the OrangeLife KLPGA/LPGA tournament. She teamed with Hye Jin Choi to beat Inbee Park and Danielle Kang 4 & 2, and with Min Ji Park to crush Lydia Ko and Minjee Lee 5 & 4. She beat Minjee in the singles 2 & 1. The KLPGA won the event 15 - 9.

Lee started the 2020 season decently, playing in two LPGA events in Australia. Her best result was a tie for 34th at the Women's Australian Open.

After that, the world was hit with the Covid19 pandemic. All sports leagues, including the LPGA and KLPGA, were massively affected by it; many events were canceed or shifted around the schedule, and fans were forbidden from attending. The KLPGA resumed action in mid-May, and right away, Lim made an impact. At the first event, the KLPGA Championship, she had the lead going into the final round, but stumbled, allowing her good friend Hyun Kyung Park to claim the title. Interestingly, Park beat Lim again in a playoff a few months later for her second career win.

Lim was not able to get a win in 2020, but she still had a solid sophomore season. She finished 8th on the money list with 526 million won earned. She earned nine top tens, including two seconds and three thirds. She also got a chance to play in her first career LPGA Major, the US Women's Open, in December, but she missed the cut.

Lim also played at the annual KLPGA/LPGA team competition, the OrangeLife Champions Trophy. She teamed with So Young Lee to beat So Yeon Ryu and Seon Woo Bae 2 & 1. In singles, she beat Jeongeun Lee6 2 & 1. The KLPGA won the event 10.5 - 7.5.

Lim had a fantastic 2021 season, elevating herself to one of the very best players on tour. She finished second on the tour money list, finishing just a hair under a billion won at 991 million total. She finally broke through with a win, her first since 2019, at the High One Resort Open. What made her so formidable is that she contended over and over besides that win. She had three additional runner up results, plus three thirds and three more fourths. She had 15 total top tens. She was second in Player of the Year points and third in scoring average; she even won the fan-selected award for Most Poular Player!

Hee Jeong's most impressive achievement in 2021 came at the LPGA's BMW Championship in the Fall. Through three rounds, against a field including a bunch of top stars including Jin Young Ko, Lim had established a four stroke lead. She had missed just one fairway to that point and had made no bogies. Ko came hard at her in the final round and caught her by the turn, but Lim fought back, recapturing the lead and forcing Ko into her first career playoff on the LPGA. On the first playoff hole, Ko striped an approach to three feet and won, denying Lim her LPGA tour card. But in 73 holes, Lim had gone bogey free, shot 22 under par, and missed just two fairways. It was one of the greatest losing efforts in LPGA history; it took the number one player in the world playing at her best to prevent Lim from earning her LPGA membership.

Lim had another superlative season on the KLPGA in 2022. She earned about 750 million won, fifth on the money list. She only had one win all year, but it came at the tour's most important event, the Korea Women's Open. There she was unstoppable, gaining a six-shot lead heading into the final day and cruising to an easy six-shot victory. She had eight other top tens. In addition, she was again chosen as the Most Popular player on tour by the fans.

Hee Jeong has been talking about going over to the LPGA, and so she played a few events to see how she stacked up. In March of 2022, Lim finished 32nd at the JTBC Classic on the LPGA; but she missed the cut at the Chevron Championship, the tour's first Major of the year, the following week. In February of 2023, she played at the LET's Saudi Ladies International, where she finished tied for 14th.

Lim had had a car accident in April, 2022 that had affected her season that year. In 2023, she struggled to return to form. She did not win that year and earned 383 million won, 28th on the money list. This was her weakest year since turning pro, with 7 total top tens and a sole second place with no thirds. But she does seem on the path back, and hopefully 2024 will be a better year for her.

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