Korean American Kevin Na won the Sony Open Tour of the American Professional Golf (PGA)

In the fourth round, 5 under par 65 strokes, final 21 under par 259 strokes
A tie for 2nd place and 2 buddies in the first half of the 4th round.
Last hole in the second half, 3rd shot, hole cup 50cm, buddy

Kevin Na (38), a Korean-American, won the US Professional Golf (PGA) Tour Sony Open. Kevin I hit a 5-under par 65 in the 4th round of the tournament held at Waialay Country Club (par 70) in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA on the 18th (Korean time).

Korean-American Cabin Na who won the Sony Open
Korean-American Cabin Na who won the Sony Open

Kevin, who wrote a final total of 21 under par 259, I reached the top, beating Chris Kirk (USA) and Joaquin Neiman (Chile) with one stroke. It’s been one year and three months since the opening of Schreiners Children’s Hospital in October 2019, and it is the fifth victory in the PGA tour.

Kevin I was in the final round with a tie for second place, two strokes behind Brandon Steele (USA), and I laid the groundwork for winning the reversal by removing two birdies from the first nine holes.

Kevin, who made the turning point smoothly, I stumbled for a while to look at the 12th hole, but from the 13th hole I regained strength. Kevin I succeeded in 3 consecutive birdies starting with the 4m birdie putt on the 13th hole, raising the atmosphere.

Kevin, who jumped to the top of the league ahead of the last hole, I put the third shot on the 18th hole (par 5) near the hole cup 50cm. Kevin I calmly pulled the birdie out of the fourth shot and confirmed the win.

Still, who had been leading until the third round, was satisfied with a tie for fourth place on the last day, only 1 under par. Among Korean nationals, Lee Kyung-hoon achieved the best performance with a tie for 19th with a final total of 15 under par 265 strokes. Lee Kyung-hoon hit 6 under par on this day alone.

Kim Si-woo finished with a tie for 25th place, 1 stroke behind Lee Kyung-hoon. Lim Seong-jae, one of the strongest candidates for the championship, tied for 56th with 271 strokes at 9-under par. Choi Gyeong-ju, the eldest brother, lost 4 strokes and fell to 71st place with 275 strokes in the final 5 under par.

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