Hat-Trick of Closing Birdies Delivers Title for Kim A-lim
5 min read

Houston, Texas, United States: Two years ago, Kim A-lim registered her first LPGA Tour of Korea victory at the Se Ri Pak Invitational. It came 20 years after that tournament’s namesake produced a seminal moment in women’s golf for the Republic of Korea, a victory in the 1998 US Women’s Open. Now the 25-year-old will have her name etched on the same iconic trophy. 

Kim (pictured right on the final green) closed out the weather-delayed final round of the 75th US Women’s Open at Champions Golf Club on a chilly Monday in southeast Texas with three consecutive birdies to edge countrywoman and world number one Ko Jin-young and American Amy Olson by one stroke.

Her four-under-par 67 matched the lowest round of the championship and gave her a three-under total of 281. Japan’s Hinako Shibuno, the 54-hole leader, finished two strokes back.

The number 94 player in the Rolex Rankings became the 10th different Korean to claim the Harton S. Semple Trophy since Pak Se-ri’s breakthrough moment 22 years ago at Blackwolf Run. That win also came on a Monday, in what became a 20-hole play-off victory over amateur Jenny Chuasiriporn.

Kim also became the third Korean in the last 15 years to win the oldest Major championship in women’s golf in her first start, joining Birdie Kim (2005) and Chun In-gee (2015). Only two others – Patty Berg in the inaugural event in 1946 and Kathy Cornelius 10 years later – had managed to win this title in their first start. In fact, this was Kim’s first-ever competition in the United States and her first women’s Major.

When the result became official, defending champion Lee6 Jeong-eun and another Korean competitor gave the new winner a celebratory shower in the Player Hospitality tent.

“Can’t really describe it in words,” said Kim through a translator. “I never expected that I was going to appear in the US Women’s Open. I still can’t feel what it’s like right now, but I’ll probably feel it when the ceremony and everything wraps up today.”

The championship had to be completed on Monday due to nearly three-quarters of an inch of rain that saturated the Cypress Creek Course on Sunday. Only twice before had a non-play-off round of the US Women’s Open been completed on a Monday: 1987 at Plainfield Country Club, where a Tuesday 18-hole play-off was required, and 2011 at The Broadmoor, where fellow Korean Ryu So-yeon prevailed in a three-hole aggregate play-off over compatriot Seo Hee-kyung.

With temperatures hovering in the 40s and a wind chill that felt like the mid-30s, players arrived at Champions Golf Club dressed more for a day on the ski slopes. Many competitors donned wool caps, wore earmuffs and used gloves to keep their hands warm. Some even put on parkas in between shots.

Kim covered her face with a mask all week to protect herself and others from Covid-19, the virus that forced the US Women’s Open to be moved from June to December and kept fans from enjoying the competition in person.

Starting the round five strokes behind Shibuno in a tie for ninth, Kim played most of the final round in relative anonymity. The television broadcast mostly focused on the trio of Shibuno, the affable 22-year-old nicknamed the ‘Smiling Cinderella’ after shocking the golf world 16 months ago with her AIG Women’s British Open victory at Woburn Golf Club in England; 2009 US Girls’ Junior champion Olson, who was looking for her first professional win; and Moriya Jutanugarn, the 26-year-old from Thailand who was seeking to join younger sister Ariya as a US Women’s Open champion.

Shibuno was the first to blink, relinquishing her lead to Olson when she bogeyed the par-four 10th hole.

Olson appeared ready to take the title. Playing with a heavy heart after finding out late Saturday night that her father-in-law had suddenly passed away. Her husband, Grant, an assistant football coach at her alma mater, North Dakota State, was en route to Texas to watch Amy when the couple received the news. Olson played through the wrenching circumstances, keeping calm throughout the round.

But she couldn’t convert birdie opportunities to build on what was at one point a two-stroke lead. A bogey caused by over-shooting the green with her hybrid tee shot on the par-three 16th effectively ended her title holes. Olson and Shibuno both converted birdie putts on the 72nd hole, the former to get within one of Kim and the latter to finish two back.

“Super mixed emotions,” said Olson, who was vying to become the seventh player in history to add the US Women’s Open to her US Girls’ Junior title. “It was a long day yesterday not being able to play, but I did get some good rest. Coming out this morning I had no idea what to expect. It was just one of those things I felt very weak and helpless the last couple days, and probably same way today on the golf course.”

Moriya struggled most of the day, shooting a three-over 74 to share sixth.

Kim stood at even par for the championship when she arrived at the 178-yard 16th hole. She proceeded to execute three of the most beautiful iron shots that this championship has witnessed in a closing stretch. Her five-iron tee shot on 16 stopped four feet from the hole. On the 393-yard, par-four 17th, her eight-iron approach stopped 18 inches from the flagstick and on the 381-yard closing hole, she knocked her 48-degree wedge from the fairway to seven feet.

When the final birdie putt dropped, Kim pumped her fist, almost assured that her closing stretch sealed the victory. She is the first player to birdie the final hole to win the US Women’s Open since fellow-Korean Ji Eun-hee in 2009 at Saucon Valley Country Club.

“It took some time for me to get used to the Bermuda grass, especially hitting the irons off the grass,” said Kim. “You really need some kind of skill, different style of swing in order to hit the ball out of [this grass]. But I love this golf course, love this environment. I even said earlier I want to actually put a tent up here and stay a few more days.”

Now she will return to golf-crazy Korea with the beautiful silver trophy, a larger bank account and the latest golf celebrity, mask or no mask.