Sungjae Im’s Comeback Reminds Us: Patience Pays Off in Professional Golf
There’s something quietly beautiful about watching a player come back from adversity and immediately start making noise. That’s exactly what Sungjae Im is doing at Innisbrook this week, and after 35 years covering this tour, I can tell you—this is the kind of story that matters more than the leaderboard suggests.
Im shot a solid 2-under 69 Friday to reach 9-under 133, holding a one-stroke lead over David Lipsky heading into the weekend at the Valspar Championship. But here’s what caught my attention: this isn’t just about the lead. It’s about what this lead represents for a 27-year-old trying to find his footing again after wrist surgery forced him to miss consecutive cuts upon his return.
Having caddied the PGA Tour in the ’90s, I learned that comebacks are rarely smooth. Players either come back too tentative, overthinking every swing, or they come back angry and pressing. Im seems to have found the middle ground, and that’s the hallmark of a maturing competitor.
The Two-Day Contrast Tells the Story
Thursday morning, Im was on fire. He shot 64 with two eagles, establishing a one-stroke lead over Brandt Snedeker. Any player with fresh legs and no rust would’ve been satisfied with that. But Friday—and this is the key—Im didn’t panic when conditions firmed up and the course got trickier. He shot 69 on a day when the Copperhead course was playing firm and fast, extracting its penalty for poor positioning.
The front nine Friday was ugly: three bogeys against only two birdies for a 37. On the back nine, though, Im found something. He birdied the par-5 11th, then the par-4 12th, and crucially, he broke a tie for the lead with a 7-foot birdie putt on the par-3 17th. That’s the kind of sequence that separates the players who belong on the tour from those just passing through.
What strikes me most is the composure. In my experience, a young player with a lead after a tough Friday doesn’t often emerge with it intact. They either play scared or play stupid. Im played smart.
Lipsky’s Quiet Excellence
I don’t want to overlook David Lipsky in this narrative. The guy is winless on the PGA Tour, which tends to make some folks underestimate him. But playing in the first group off the tee—typically the toughest slot on a Friday morning—he fired a 65. That’s outstanding.
“It was excellent. I did everything well. Missed it in the right spots, holed the putts early on to get some momentum going. That finishing stretch is obviously tough, so, able to save a couple pars down on 16 and 18 and really kept the round going.”
Notice what Lipsky said: he holed putts early and then managed par down the stretch. That’s not flashy, but it’s the recipe for weekend contention. He birdied the first two holes and four of the first six, then added two more on the 10th and 11th before going 7-for-7 in par. When you’re a winless player trying to get that first tour victory, that kind of course management is everything.
The Field Behind Them
Chandler Blanchet and Doug Ghim are both at 7-under, just two shots back. Blanchet closed with a bogey for a 66, while Ghim had an interesting day—he eagled the par-5 11th but gave it back with bogeys on 15 and 16.
“Obviously, I wish I would have finished a little bit better. Two bad holes doesn’t really necessarily kind of ruin a good day.”
Ghim’s comment is telling. At this level, knowing that two bad holes don’t define your round is maturity. He’s only five shots back with 36 holes to play.
Meanwhile, defending champion Viktor Hovland missed the cut with rounds of 70 and 75. That’s perhaps the most significant story here. Hovland, who won this event last year, couldn’t handle the firm conditions and got bounced. It’s a reminder that even elite players have off weeks, and that’s not a referendum on their talent—it’s just golf.
Snedeker’s Captain’s Perspective
Brandt Snedeker, playing on a sponsor exemption, dropped to 5-under after a 72. The 45-year-old U.S. Presidents Cup captain seemed philosophical about sliding back.
“The good thing is it’s playing really tough and tricky this afternoon. Try to take a positive from that. Hung in there when things weren’t going great.”
That’s the mindset of someone who’s been around long enough to understand that Saturday and Sunday are what matter. Being four shots back at Innisbrook isn’t insurmountable.
What It All Means
I think what’s happening this week at the Valspar is exactly what professional golf needs right now. We’ve got young players proving themselves against older ones. We’ve got winless players knocking on the door. We’ve got a course that’s playing legitimate defense without being penal. And we’ve got Sungjae Im, a guy many thought might be fading, showing that comebacks from injury are still possible at this level.
The back nine awaits, and that’s where Im and Lipsky will either build on their weeks or start looking at next week. But what they’ve shown so far is that patience, course management, and composure still matter in professional golf—even when the greens are firm and the rough is thick.

