Kenny Kim said he is automatically clicking Kyong-Hoon Lee this week because everything about the re-tooled Craig Ranch still screams Korean advantage. Lee lives in the Dallas Metroplex alongside most of the other Korean PGA pros, so he gets more home-course practice reps than the average Tour stop. Kim reminded listeners that Lee ran off back-to-back wins here at −26 and −25 when the track played as a soft, wide-open par-72. Even though the Tour has stretched the layout to 7,600 yards and shaved a par-5 into a long par-4, Kim believes the changes actually help Lee: softer, watered greens mean longer approach clubs will still hold, and Lee’s comfort shaping mid-irons into Craig Ranch’s bowl-shaped pin areas remains a huge edge. With sportsbooks lengthening Lee’s outright number after two mediocre starts and DFS salary settling in the mid-$8K range, Kim views him as an under-priced core play in all formats, especially given the local crowd support and the intangible ‘Korea Week’ bump Korean players historically get when CJ sponsors the event.