词条 | John Huh | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| name = John Huh | image = | image_size = | caption = | fullname = | nickname = | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1990|5|21}} | birth_place = New York City, New York | death_date = | death_place = | height = {{height|ft=6|in=0}} | weight = {{convert|190|lb|kg st|abbr=on}} | nationality = {{USA}} | residence = Los Angeles, California | spouse = | partner = | children = | college = California State University, Northridge | yearpro = 2008 | retired = | tour = PGA Tour | extour = OneAsia Tour Korean Tour | prowins = 2 | pgawins = 1 | eurowins = | japwins = | asiawins = | sunwins = | auswins = | nwidewins = | chalwins = | champwins = | seneurowins = | otherwins = | majorwins = | masters = T11: 2013 | usopen = T17: 2013 | open = CUT: 2012, 2013 | pga = T68: 2012 | wghofid = | wghofyear = | award1 = PGA Tour Rookie of the Year | year1 = 2012 | award2 = | year2 = | awardssection = }} John Huh (Korean: 허찬수, born May 21, 1990) is an American professional golfer who plays on the PGA Tour. Amateur careerHuh was born in New York City to Korean parents. He moved to South Korea shortly after his birth and he lived there for 12 years, then moved to Chicago, Illinois for three years, and then to Los Angeles, California.[1] He attended California State University, Northridge for two weeks before turning professional in 2008. Huh left college due to the lack of core courses, preventing him from receiving a scholarship and being approved for NCAA competition. Professional careerEarly careerWith his college career ending before it began, Huh turned professional and played on the Korean Tour for three years. In 2010 he won the Shinhan Donghae Open and was named the 2010 Korean Tour Rookie of the Year. He also played on the OneAsia Tour in 2010 and 2011, finishing 46th[2] and 15th[3] on the Order of Merit, respectively. He earned his PGA Tour card for 2012 by finishing in a tie for 27th at qualifying school, making the cut on the number (two Nationwide Tour graduates were among the top 25, allowing Huh to earn a Tour card). Prior to qualifying school, Huh had no starts on a U.S.-based professional tour. 2012In only his second PGA Tour event, Huh finished in a tie for 6th at the Farmers Insurance Open. He continued his strong play the following week when he finished in a tie for 12th at the Waste Management Phoenix Open. In only his fifth PGA Tour event, Huh picked up his first victory at the Mayakoba Golf Classic, defeating Robert Allenby in an eight-hole sudden death playoff.[4] Allenby held a two stroke lead with one hole to play but double bogeyed after putting his tee shot in the trees, and a Huh par forced a playoff. The playoff tied the second longest playoff in PGA Tour history. Huh made the cut in his first six PGA Tour events. He was in contention at the Valero Texas Open, but fell two shots short of champion Ben Curtis and finished in a tie for second.[5] Huh broke into the top-100 of the Official World Golf Ranking for the first time, moving to 90th. In May, Huh finished in a tie for fifth at the Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial. Huh played in his first major at the 2012 Open Championship, earning entry through FedEx Cup standings, where he missed the cut. He would also be the only rookie to advance to the 2012 Tour Championship, the fourth and final event of the FedEx Cup. Huh's performance was good enough for 28th on the money list, earning him entry into the 2013 Masters Tournament (top 30 money earners were given automatic entry). Huh won the PGA Tour Rookie of the Year for his 2012 season, the first person of Korean descent to win the honor. 2013Huh was unable to repeat the success of 2012, but did well enough to go to the FedEx Cup. He finished T11 at the Masters and earned entry into the 2014 tournament. His best finish of the season was a T3 at the Wyndham Championship and reached a career high of 62nd in the OWGR. 2014Huh had two T3 finishes (Valero Texas Open and Barracuda Championship) and finished 96th in the FedEx Cup. 2015Despite no finish better than 17th, Huh finished 110th in the FedEx Cup. 2016Huh's season best was a T-6 at the Waste Management Phoenix Open en route to finishing 95th in the FedEx Cup. Professional wins (2)PGA Tour wins (1)
Korean Tour wins (1)
Results in major championships
CUT = missed the half-way cut "T" indicates a tie for a place Summary
See also
References1. ^What they said: John Huh {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120209224950/http://www.pgatour.com/2012/tournaments/r004/01/28/huh-interview/index.html |date=2012-02-09 }} 2. ^OneAsia Tour – Order of Merit – 2010 3. ^OneAsia Tour – Order of Merit – 2011 4. ^[https://www.usatoday.com/sports/golf/pga/story/2012-02-26/john-huh-wins-mayakoba-golf-classic-in-eight-hole-playoff-with-robert-allenby/53260112/1 John Huh wins Mayakoba Classic on eighth playoff hole] 5. ^[https://www.sbnation.com/golf/2012/4/22/2967693/pga-tour-money-list-2012 John Huh Enters Top 20 After Second-Place Finish] External links
7 : American male golfers|PGA Tour golfers|Sportspeople from New York City|Sportspeople from Chicago|Sportspeople from Los Angeles|1990 births|Living people |
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