Johnny Keefer

American professional golfer (born 2001) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Henry Keefer IV[3] (born January 11, 2001) is an American professional golfer who plays on the PGA Tour. After playing for Baylor University, he turned professional and finished first on the 2024 PGA Tour Americas points list, earning promotion to the Korn Ferry Tour. He topped the 2025 Korn Ferry Tour points list to secure status on the PGA Tour.

Full nameJohn Henry Keefer IV
Born (2001-01-11) January 11, 2001 (age 25)
Height5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Sporting nationality United States
Quick facts Personal information, Full name ...
Johnny Keefer
Personal information
Full nameJohn Henry Keefer IV
Born (2001-01-11) January 11, 2001 (age 25)
Height5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Sporting nationality United States
ResidenceSan Antonio, Texas, U.S.[1]
Career
CollegeBaylor University
Turned professional2024
Current tourPGA Tour
Former toursPGA Tour Americas
Korn Ferry Tour
Professional wins3
Highest ranking45 (January 11, 2026)[2]
(as of March 15, 2026)
Number of wins by tour
Korn Ferry Tour2
Other1
Best results in major championships
Masters TournamentDNP
PGA ChampionshipCUT: 2025
U.S. OpenT61: 2025
The Open ChampionshipDNP
Achievements and awards
PGA Tour Americas
points list winner
2024
Korn Ferry Tour
points list winner
2025
Korn Ferry Tour
Player of the Year
2025
Korn Ferry Tour
Rookie of the Year
2025
Close

Early life and amateur career

Keefer was born in Baltimore, Maryland,[1] to Judy and John Keefer III.[4][5] Judy moved to the United States from Hong Kong as a child.[4] Both of Keefer's parents are engineers;[6] they worked at Gilbane Building, a construction and real estate development firm. They often traveled as part of their work and Judy described Keefer as a "latchkey kid".[7] Keefer has an elder sister, Amanda.[4]

Keefer's father was a recreational golfer and introduced his son to the game as a child. The family moved to San Diego, California when Keefer was aged seven, and he began playing golf at The Farms Golf Club. They relocated to San Antonio, Texas when Keefer was 14 and he joined TPC San Antonio.[4] Alongside golf, he played lacrosse until his senior year of high school. He originally intended to become a professional lacrosse player but switched focus to golf after the move to San Antonio.[4] Keefer attended Lady Bird Johnson High School in San Antonio.[8] In 2017, he won the AJGA Sergio and Angela Garcia Foundation Junior Championship and the TJGT Texas Junior Masters. He was No. 10 in the Golfweek rankings of the 2019 recruiting class and signed his National Letter of Intent in November 2018 with Baylor University.[9]

Playing for the Baylor Bears from 2019 to 2024, Keefer was an All-Big 12 selection in 2022 and 2024, and qualified to represent the United States at the 2022 Arnold Palmer Cup.[8] He won medalist honors twice, at the 2021 Rice Intercollegiate and 2023 Valero Texas Collegiate.[10] He had a career stroke average of 71.45, which broke the Baylor program record previously held by Jimmy Walker (71.55).[8] Keefer majored in accounting and became the first men's golfer in Big 12 Conference history to win back-to-back Scholar Athlete of the Year awards.[11]

Professional career

Keefer finished 25th in the 2023–24 PGA Tour University standings, which earned him status on PGA Tour Americas.[8] In his 10 starts during the 2024 PGA Tour Americas season, he placed inside the top-10 nine times, including four runner-up finishes and a win at the CentrePort Canada Rail Park Manitoba Open. He set the record for lowest scoring average on PGA Tour Americas (66.00) and finished first in the points list, earning promotion to the Korn Ferry Tour in 2025.[12] Keefer received an exemption into the Procore Championship in September 2024, which was his PGA Tour debut. He tied for 13th at 9-under 279.[13]

In April 2025, Keefer shot a final-round 64 to total 30-under 254 and win the Veritex Bank Championship by three strokes. This was his first Korn Ferry Tour victory.[10] He made his major championship debut at the 2025 PGA Championship in May, and made his first cut in a major championship at the 2025 U.S. Open in June, where he finished tied-61st. Keefer won his second Korn Ferry Tour title of the season at the NV5 Invitational in July, shooting 26-under 258 to break the tournament scoring record.[14]

Keefer ended the 2025 Korn Ferry Tour season ranked first in the points list, securing full status on the PGA Tour in 2026. He had a scoring average of 67.95, breaking the Korn Ferry Tour record set by Luke Guthrie in 2012 (68.33).[15][16] For his achievements, Keefer was named the Korn Ferry Tour Rookie of the Year and Korn Ferry Tour Player of the Year. He was the first to win both awards since Scottie Scheffler in 2019.[17] After finishing tied-seventh in the PGA Tour's RSM Classic in November 2025, Keefer moved to 47th in the Official World Golf Ranking.[18]

Personal life

Keefer became engaged to his fiancée Hitomi Chilcutt in May 2025.[4][19]

Amateur wins

  • 2018 Sergio and Angela Garcia Foundation Junior Championship

Source:[20]

Professional wins (3)

Korn Ferry Tour wins (2)

More information No., Date ...
No. Date Tournament Winning score Margin of
victory
Runner(s)-up
1 Apr 27, 2025 Veritex Bank Championship −30 (63-61-66-64=254) 3 strokes United States Tyson Alexander, United States Blades Brown,
United States Joshua Creel, United States Zach James,
United States Julian Suri
2 Jul 27, 2025 NV5 Invitational −26 (65-63-61-69=258) 2 strokes United States Jeffrey Kang
Close

Korn Ferry Tour playoff record (0–1)

More information No., Year ...
No.YearTournamentOpponentResult
1 2025 Visit Knoxville Open Sweden Pontus Nyholm Lost to eagle on first extra hole
Close

PGA Tour Americas wins (1)

More information No., Date ...
No. Date Tournament Winning score Margin of
victory
Runners-up
1 Aug 25, 2024 CentrePort Canada Rail Park Manitoba Open −26 (63-61-71-67=262) 1 stroke Canada Joey Savoie, United States Neal Shipley
Close

Results in major championships

More information Tournament ...
Close
  Did not play

CUT = missed the half-way cut
T = tied

U.S. national team appearances

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI