Swing Sequence: Danny Lee
Danny Lee is not your ordinary tour pro. Not even close. Most of today's young players are bred on the college circuit and come out ready to win, but the Korean-born Lee took a different route.
At age 11, Danny moved with his family to New Zealand when his father became ill. They stayed for six years while he received cancer treatments. So Danny learned golf as a Kiwi of sorts, which explains his unique way of talking. "He's caught between Korean and English with a New Zealand accent," says his teacher of 18 months, Drew Steckel.
Lee's father recovered, and the family immigrated to the United States. Danny was working with Jim Flick and won the 2010 U.S. Amateur at age 18, then the youngest-ever winner. But after Flick died in 2012, Lee lost his way, bouncing around tours and among teachers. "I saw a lot of instructors," Lee says, "but nothing felt right. Then I found Drew."
"I'm like a big brother," Steckel says. "I make sure he focuses on golf." That doesn't seem very hard to do. Steckel says: "He practices more than anyone out here." In July, Lee got his first PGA Tour win, at the Greenbrier Classic. Stay tuned.
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