Professional golfer Kim Kaufman battling breast cancer at age 33
Kim Kaufman will find out the day after Christmas if she needs chemotherapy. Given her age, 33, the chances are high, but sheâll have six and a half weeks of radiation regardless.
Kaufman kept telling people it hadnât sunk in yet. Even after the lumpectomy she felt fine. The length of the 4-inch scar, however, forced to her lie down in the doctor's office. She'd expected something much smaller.
But while she couldnât practice or work out, she was bored more than anything else.
âIf you saw me in the street, you wouldnât know,â Kaufman told Golfweek from her Texas home. âI think that confuses people because when they think of a cancer patient, theyâre thinking of the bald person who is tired and cold and weak. But thatâs really a chemo patient, which may be me in about a month.â
The diagnosis of cancer really started to hit when she was forced to withdraw from the final stage of December's LPGA Qualifying School. Kaufman isn't sure when she'll make it back to competitive golf. One thing she does know: She don't won't rush it.
Kaufman played her first full season on the LPGA in 2014 after a successful stint at Texas Tech. The 6-foot-tall native of Clark, South Dakota, has mostly played on the Epson Tour in recent years, where sheâs a three-time winner. A published author who wouldâve gone to law school had golf not worked out, Kaufman has always been more substance than flash.
She delivered the news to friends that she had invasive ductal carcinoma in a positive, straightforward manner.
âI feel like I was more emotional than she was,â said Cheyenne Knight, who relied heavily on Kaufman as an LPGA rookie.
Angela Stanford found herself apologizing to Kaufman in the locker room at Shady Oaks Country Club after receiving the news. Kaufman had shared her cancer diagnosis earlier that day in the parking lot at the Fort Worth club and an overwhelmed Stanford, whose mother died of cancer two years ago, initially froze.
Sheâs just so young. And so healthy. How could this be?
When Kaufman went in to get her lumpectomy, Stanford came over and cleaned the house and restocked the shelves. Kaufman and her husband, Johan Wolkesson, kept noticing little extras like new laundry detergent and paper towels.
âWe were finding things all week,â said Kaufman. âIt was like a little easter egg hunt.â
Kaufmanâs breast cancer journey began at her annual wellness exam in September 2023 when her doctor off-handedly said she had some dense fatty issue on the left side.
âI was like OK, thanks,â said Kaufman. âThat didnât mean anything to me.â
By late spring/early summer of this year, Kaufman began noticing that a dimple had started to form. She talked herself out of thinking much of it, telling herself she was just being paranoid.
During an off-week in late September before the Epson Tour Championship, Kaufman went in for her annual exam. Her doctor said she needed to get a mammogram.
âEven then I wasnât really nervous,â said Kaufman. âIt wasnât like I was playing the Tour Championship with this huge weight on me.â
She entered the week 14th in the Race for the Card. The top 15 earn LPGA status for 2025. Kaufman opened with a 74 in Indian Wells, California, to miss the cut and ultimately finished 16th in the standings, missing her card by one spot.
When she got home, Kaufman went in for the mammogram and was called back for an ultrasound. Then came the radiologist.
âHe came in and showed me, âHereâs the mass weâre looking at,â â recalled Kaufman. âI donât know all the words he said, but I remember laying there thinking Oh, I have breast cancer. He knows that.â â
She was back the next day at 6:15 a.m. for a biopsy and got the call that she had cancer on a Saturday morning.
A further test revealed that she carries a genetic mutation.
âYou think youâre going to get hereâs what you have, and hereâs what we know and hereâs what weâre going to do, but in reality ⌠itâs an evolving diagnosis,â said Kaufman. âYouâre going to get a new test and maybe take a step forward or a step back.â
When they removed the tumor, which was larger than doctors originally thought at 3 ½ centimeters, they found clear margins. But they also found Grade 2 cancer in a lymph node.
Sheâll meet with her oncologist on the day after Christmas to find out if chemotherapy is needed before radiation.
Kaufman has a date set in October for a double mastectomy, should she choose to have one. Sheâll have to wait six months for her skin to heal before she can have the surgery.
âFor me, when I first learned I was like letâs go, letâs do it. You want to fix stuff,â said Kaufman, âand you just have to wait. Kind of the hardest part sometimes.â
Stanford, Knight and Kaufman often play in the âOne oâclock Gameâ at Shady, which is actually never at 1 p.m. The club's members have rallied to show support, as have LPGA and Epson Tour players, sending gift cards and meals and prayers.
Kaufman is grateful for it all, of course, but doesnât want to make a fuss.
âI think sheâs kind of a self-made person,â said Stanford. âShe has done it on her own. Itâs hard sometimes to be in that vulnerable position. ⌠She needs as much as she can get, and she doesnât know it yet. These people reach out and help because they know.â
Kaufman used to think it was cliche when people facing health scares posted things like, âIf I can help one person âŚâ
She doesnât think that way anymore.
Kaufman has played professional golf for 11 years and is the third player known to be diagnosed with cancer in that timeframe.
LPGA player Lisa Ferrero was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2014 at age 31 and, on Valentineâs Day, had a mastectomy to remove a tumor that was 9 centimeters. Ferrero had discovered the lump 18 months prior, but a doctor told her she was too young to be concerned.
In 2017, a then 30-year-old Tiffany Joh had melanoma removed from her scalp. When the dermatologist called with the news, she told Joh that as someone of Asian descent, she wasnât on the radar for this type of diagnosis.
âIf I get one girl to go to their yearly [exam], thatâs worth it,â said Kaufman. âAs corny as I used to think that sounds sometimes. Everyone Iâve told Iâm like, âDo you go? Do you go?
âGo, please. Iâm begging you to go.â
This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Professional golfer Kim Kaufman battling breast cancer age 33