After learning of friend’s death, PGA Tour pro made an ace at Houston Open: ‘Maybe he was looking down’

Chan Kim will never forget Friday’s round.

HOUSTON — Chan Kim will never forget his round Friday at the 2024 Texas Children’s Houston Open.

Thursday night, Kim learned one of his longtime friends from high school died.

“We were on the same golf team,” Kim said. “Both him and his brother I’ve known for a while. We actually just played some golf when I was home before Mexico. And we normally game a lot, so I’m a big Call of Duty fan, so we literally played the week of the Players.

“Yeah, it was just kind of sudden, didn’t really get any notice of it until last night. Yeah, like I said, today was kind of a special round. Regardless of how it went, it was nice to play for something a little bit more than just myself.”

Kim got off to an excellent start. He was 2 under thru 8 holes Friday morning when he stepped to the tee of the par-3 ninth at Memorial Park Golf Course and pulled a wedge from 157 yards. One hop later, the ball disappeared. It was Kim’s first ace on Tour.

“I just would have thought that maybe he was looking down, you know, just trying to give me a miracle,” Kim said. “Yeah, definitely needed all of it. I’m happy of the result today, for sure.”

The hole-in-one helped Kim turn in a 4-under 31. He shot 3 under on Friday and will make the weekend, sitting at 2 under for the tournament.

The ace was also special because of one Kim, a Tour rookie, nearly had earlier this season.

“I feel like obviously getting a hole-in-one is very, very lucky, but I feel like the Tour kind of owed me one because I flew one in on 11 at Sony and it popped out 60 feet and ended up three-putting for bogey,” Kim said. “I felt like I was owed one, for sure.”

PGA Tour rookies Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Chan Kim took different paths to Sony Open in Hawaii

Two rookies separated by a decade in age and several thousand miles from each other grew up with the same dream.

HONOLULU — Reigning British Open champion Brian Harman made his PGA Tour debut at the 2012 Sony Open in Hawaii. Now 36 and entering his 13th year as a Tour member, he was asked Tuesday how he realized when he reached veteran status.

“I think when you start showing up to this tournament and you don’t recognize anyone that’s here,” he said during a pre-tournament press conference. “That’s when you know you’ve been out here a while. You’re looking and you’re like, ‘Man, someone letting their kid out there putting?’ No, that guy is a rookie. ‘OK, here we go.’”

This week, that fresh face for Harman could be that of Belgian Adrien Dumont de Chassart, who Wednesday was voted 2023 Korn Ferry Tour Rookie of the Year by his peers. The 23-year-old Dumont de Chassart enjoyed a fifth year at University of Illinois, where he was a three-time Big Ten Player of the Year, and graduated with a degree in business management. Belgium isn’t exactly a golfing hotbed and yet his path into golf had as much to do with geography as anything.

“I lived a mile away from a golf course, so my dad and my brother always brought me with them when I was very young, and that’s how I get started,” he said.

After finishing third in the 2023 PGA Tour University ranking, Dumont de Chassart won in his pro debut on the Korn Ferry Tour. He finished second the following week and hardly slowed down, recording six consecutive top-10s and assured a rapid rise to the PGA Tour this season.

Sony Open: Photos

“I think that’s a dream that every kid back home wants to accomplish one day,” said Dumont de Chassart, who joins fellow Belgian and Illini grad Thomas Detry in the big leagues.

That’s something the young Belgian and Chan Kim, who took a more circuitous route to the Tour, share in common. Kim is a 33-year-old rookie who said his body’s aches and pains make him feel more like a 43-year-old.

“Well, would’ve loved to be a rookie at 23. Sometimes that doesn’t work out,” he said. “Just to be here, to have this experience, know that this is – it’s been a lifelong goal.”

Kim grew up not far from Waialae Country Club, host of the tournament since 1965, from age 3 to 16 and attended the Sony Open as a kid every year. He would wake up at 4:30 a.m. and wait for a tee time at Ala Wai Golf Course, one of the nation’s busiest municipal courses, and use his junior pass, which gave him 20 nine-hole rounds for $20.

“So, a dollar per nine holes,” he said. “Just can’t get that anywhere else.”

After turning pro, he spent eight years playing on the Japan Golf Tour, winning eight times. He still remembers trying to figure out how much his first check amounted to in U.S. dollars.

“I was running around telling people I’m a millionaire in Japanese yen,” he said.

With the top 30 on last season’s Korn Ferry Tour points list graduating to the PGA Tour for this season – up from 25 – Kim called it “a no-brainer” to try his luck on the developmental circuit, and he won twice and finished second in the season-long points list.

Two rookies separated by a decade in age and several thousand miles from each other grew up with the same dream. That’s not all they share in common. Asked to write three words on a sheet of paper to describe himself, Dumont de Chassart chose “Never Give Up,” his motto ever since he rallied to win a match from five down with five holes to go in the quarterfinals of the French Boys’ under 18, and went on to win the title. It’s a motto that could just as easily describe Kim’s long and winding road to his rookie debut just 10 minutes from his where his dream to be a pro golfer was born.

“To be a PGA Tour member and come back here, to kick everything off pretty much in my hometown,” he said, “yeah, it’s a treat.”

Meet the 30 Korn Ferry Tour golfers who earned PGA Tour cards for 2024 season

These 30 players are being promoted to the big leagues.

The Korn Ferry Tour Championship was the 26th and final event of the 2023 season, and the top 30 players on the Korn Ferry Tour Points List upon conclusion of Sunday’s final round earned their PGA Tour cards for the 2024 season.

The action at Victoria National Golf Club in Newburgh, Indiana, was intense as 16 cards had already been finalized heading into the week, leaving just 14 cards still up for grabs.

Paul Barjon won the season-ending event and that vaulted him into the top 30. He was among the five players who were not in the top 30 when the week started who played their way in. Shad Tuten was dinged with a two-shot penalty Sunday and that cost him a card, dropping from 29th to 32nd. Jorge Fernandez Valdes finished in the 31st spot, a third-round 77 likely the biggest culprit for him.

The top KFT finisher was Ben Kohles, who had two wins this season.

For those who fell short, all is not lost. Players who finished Nos. 31-60 on the KFT points list have earned exemptions to the Final Stage of PGA Tour Q-School, where the top five finishers and ties will earn their 2024 PGA Tour cards.

The final stage is Dec. 14-17 at TPC Sawgrass Dye’s Valley Course as well as Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.

The 2024 PGA Tour season starts at The Sentry, Jan. 4-7 at the Plantation Course at Kapalua but that event is reserved for PGA Tour winners and the top 30 in the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup standings from last season, so for these KFT grads, their 2024 PGA Tour season will start the next week at the Sony Open of Hawaii.

Here’s the complete list of 30 Korn Ferry Tour golfers who earned their 2024 PGA Tour cards.

Chan Kim wins on Korn Ferry Tour; David Kocher records circuit’s 10th 59

Kocher drained a long birdie putt on the 18th hole for a 59, the third on the Korn Ferry Tour this season.

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Chan Kim went bogey-free for 72 holes at the 2023 Albertsons Boise Open and won on the Korn Ferry Tour for the second week in a row. Kim went 66-62-64-64 to get to 28 under after four days at Hillcrest Country Club and still left himself little room for error considering what David Kocher did Sunday.

Kocher drained a long birdie putt on the 18th hole for a 59, amazingly the third 59 on the Korn Ferry Tour this season.

Kocher had 10 birdies – including six straight on Nos. 2 through 7 – and an eagle to get to 12 under for the day and 26 under for the week.

Kocher joins Mac Meissner, who posted a 59 at the Lecom Suncoast Classic at Lakewood National’s Commander Course in Lakewood Ranch, Florida, in April. That was the eighth sub-60 round in Korn Ferry Tour history.

Michael Feagles had the circuit’s ninth 59 at the BMW Charity Pro-Am in Greer, South Carolina, in June.

Now there’s a 10th, and a third in four months, thanks for Kocher.

2023 Albertsons Boise Open
Chan Kim celebrates on the 18th green after winning the the 2023 Albertsons Boise Open at Hillcrest Country Club in Boise, Idaho. (Photo: Alex Goodlett/Getty Images)

As for Kim, he’s the first back-to-back winner in two years. Cameron Young and Mito Pereira each did it on the KFT in 2021.

His last seven holes a week ago were also bogey free, so Kim has actually played 79 consecutive holes without a bogey. He’s the first to win and go bogey-free at the Albertsons.

To the winner goes the spoils, as Kim, second on the Korn Ferry Tour Points List, has also earned his PGA Tour card for the 2024 season.

The Albertsons Boise Open is the first of four events in the season-ending Korn Ferry Tour Finals.

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