Women's major golf championships


Image:2008 LPGA Championship - Annika Sorenstam tee shot.jpg|thumb|right|Annika Sörenstam won ten women's major golf championships, the most in the third era of women's majors.
Image:2011 Women's British Open - Tseng Yani cropped.jpg|thumb|right|Yani Tseng won five majors in four years in the third era.
Image:2007 LPGA Championship - Lorena Ochoa.jpg|thumb|right|Lorena Ochoa won two women's majors.
Women's golf has a set of major championships, a series of tournaments designated to be of a higher status than other tournaments. Five tournaments are currently designated as 'majors' in women's golf by the LPGA.
The LPGA's list of majors has changed in constitution since the first major was held at the Women's Western Open in 1930. There have been four different periods, 1930 to 1972, 1973 to 2000, 2001 to 2013, and the current version which began in 2014. The current version of tournaments is the Chevron Championship, The Evian Championship, U.S. Women's Open, PGA Championship">PGA Tour">PGA Championship, The Women's Open.

LPGA majors

As of 2023, the order in which women's majors are played is:
Before The Evian Championship became the fifth LPGA major, the setup of women's majors closely paralleled that of the men's majors. In both cases, the United States hosted three majors and the United Kingdom one.
The Evian Championship is held in France. The U.S. Open, The Open Championship, and the PGA Championship match their male equivalents. The Chevron Championship is the first major of the season and through 2022 was held at a single host course, similarly to the Masters Tournament, in 2023 it was held at The Club at Carlton Woods
Unlike the mainstream men's equivalents, all but one of the women's majors have title sponsors. Each of the five majors falls under a different jurisdiction. The LPGA organizes The Chevron Championship. Through 2014, it also organized the LPGA Championship, but since 2015 that tournament has been taken over by the PGA of America, the body that organizes the men's PGA Championship, and has been renamed the Women's PGA Championship. The U.S. Women's Open, is operated by the United States Golf Association. The Women's Open is operated by The R&A since a 2016 merger with the Ladies Golf Union. The Evian Championship is operated by the Ladies European Tour.
From 2006 through 2008, the winners of the four women's majors received automatic entry to the LPGA's season championship, the LPGA Tour Championship. Beginning in 2009, the Tour Championship extended entry to all players in the top 120 on the official LPGA Money List. Starting in 2011, the Tour Championship was replaced by the CME Group Titleholders; from that point through 2013, the top three finishers at all official tour events, including the majors, who had not already qualified for the Titleholders earned entries. Starting in 2014, the LPGA adopted a points race similar in some ways to the PGA Tour's FedEx Cup. In the new system, officially called the "Race to the CME Globe", the top 72 points earners during the season, plus all tournament winners, qualify for the renamed final event, the CME Group Tour Championship, in which the top nine points earners will have at least a mathematical chance of winning the season title.

History

Eight different events are classified as having been LPGA majors at some time. The number in each season has fluctuated between two and five. The first tournament which is now included in the LPGA's official list of major victories is the 1930 Women's Western Open, although this is a retrospective designation as the LPGA was not founded until 1950.·The Titleholders was played from 1937 to 1966 with a gap due to World War II. In 1967 there were three majors, then from 1968 to 1971 this decreased and went back to two majors. Then in 1979, the du Maurier Classic was first played and immediately considered a major leading to three majors again from 1979 to 1982. In 1983, when Nabisco Dinah Shore gained major championship status, there were four majors.

LPGA major winners

Major championships by golfer

RankPlayerCountryWinning spanTotalChevron C'shipPGA C'shipU.S. OpenBritish Opendu MaurierTitle- holdersWestern OpenEvian C'ship
1Patty Berg1937–195815177
2Mickey Wright1958–1966134423
3Louise Suggs1946–1959111244
4Annika Sörenstam1995–2006103331
4Babe Zaharias1940–195410334
6Betsy Rawls1951–19698242
7Juli Inkster1984–200272221
7Karrie Webb1999–2006721211
7Inbee Park2008–201571321
10Pat Bradley1980–198661113
10Betsy King1987–19976312
10Patty Sheehan1983–19966132
10Kathy Whitworth1965–19756321

The "Grand Slam"

No woman has completed a four-major Grand Slam, much less one with five majors. Babe Zaharias won all three majors contested in 1950 and Sandra Haynie won both majors in 1974.
During the four-major era, six women have completed a "Career Grand Slam" by winning four different majors. There are variations in the set of four tournaments involved as the players played in different eras. The six are: Pat Bradley; Juli Inkster; Annika Sörenstam; Louise Suggs; Karrie Webb; and Mickey Wright. During the five-major era, Inbee Park became the first woman to complete the "Career Grand Slam." Even though there has been some debate surrounding whether Park has actually accomplished this feat, as she won The Evian Championship in 2012 before it officially became a major in 2013, LPGA acknowledged Park to have successfully achieved a "Career Grand Slam."
The LPGA recognizes Webb as its only "Super Career Grand Slam" winner, since she is the only golfer to have won five events recognized by the LPGA as majors. Before the elevation of The Evian Championship to major status, the following was required for a golfer to win the Super Career Grand Slam:
  • The du Maurier Classic between 1979 and 2000, when it was recognized by the LPGA as a major;
  • the Women's British Open in 2001 or later; and
  • the other three then-existing majors.
Webb won the du Maurier Classic in 1999 and the Women's British Open in 2002.

Major champions by nationality

The table below shows the number of major championships won by golfers from various countries/regions.
Country1930s40s50s60s70s80s90s2000s10s20sTotal
132134322131299116207
2920536
1392217
3161415
14117
1146
145
1113
1113
213
213
22
112
112
112
112
11
11
11
11
Total13213535223740404729319

Multiple major victories in a calendar year

Three victories

Note: These golfers are also included below in the Two victories section.

Two victories

ANA Inspiration and LPGA Championship

ANA Inspiration and The Evian Championship

ANA Inspiration and U.S. Women's Open

ANA Inspiration and Women's British Open

LPGA Championship and U.S. Women's Open

LPGA Championship and Women's British Open

U.S. Women's Open and Women's British Open

  • Never has occurred

ANA Inspiration and du Maurier Classic

LPGA Championship and du Maurier Classic

U.S. Women's Open and du Maurier Classic

  • Never occurred

Women's Western Open and LPGA Championship

Women's Western Open and U.S. Women's Open

Women's Western Open and Titleholders Championship

LPGA Championship and Titleholders Championship

  • 1961: Mickey Wright

U.S. Women's Open and Titleholders Championship

  • 1950: Babe Zaharias
  • 1961: Mickey Wright

Record scores

The lowest score in relation to par recorded in a women's major championship was 21-under-par, by Chun In-gee at the 2016 Evian Championship. Chun also holds the record for lowest aggregate score for 72-holes, at 263, for her performance at that tournament. The single round scoring record is 61 held by three golfers, Kim Hyo-joo at the 2014 Evian Championship, Lee Jeong-eun and Leona Maguire, both at 2021 Evian Championship. A score of 62 has been shot by Minea Blomqvist at the 2004 Women's British Open, Lorena Ochoa at the 2006 Kraft Nabisco Championship, and Mirim Lee at the 2016 Women's British Open.

Rolex Annika Major Award

In 2014, the LPGA established the yearly Rolex Annika Major Award to recognize the overall best performance in the LPGA majors. Points are awarded for top-10 finishes in each major: 60 points for first place, 24 for second, down to 2 points for tenth place. The major winner with the most points at the end of the season wins the award. It is named after Annika Sörenstam.
YearWinnerCountryPointsRef
2014Michelle Wie84
2015Inbee Park144
2016Lydia Ko102
2017Ryu So-yeon78
2018Ariya Jutanugarn88
2019Ko Jin-young138
2021Patty Tavatanakit80
2022Minjee Lee98
2023Lilia Vu120
2024Nelly Korda84
2025Minjee Lee78

Other regular tours

In men's golf, the four majors are agreed globally. All the principal tours acknowledge the status of the majors via their sponsorship of the Official World Golf Ranking, and the prize money is official on the three richest regular tours. This is not the case in women's golf, but the significance of this is limited, as the LPGA Tour is much more dominant in women's golf than the PGA Tour is in men's golf. For example, the BBC has been known to use the LPGA definition of women's majors without qualifying it. Also, before the Evian Masters was elevated to major status, the Ladies' Golf Union, the governing body for women's golf in the UK and Republic of Ireland and the organiser of the Women's British Open, stated on its official site that the Women's British Open is "the only Women's Major to be played outside the U.S."
The Ladies European Tour does not sanction any of the LPGA majors which are played in the United States, and only has two events which it designates as majors on its schedule, namely the Women's British Open and The Evian Championship, which is played in France. The Ladies European Tour had long tacitly acknowledged the dominance of the LPGA Tour by not scheduling any of its events to conflict with any of the LPGA majors played in the U.S., but that changed slightly in 2008 when the LET scheduled a tournament opposite the LPGA Championship. Also, while the LPGA Tour did not recognize the then-Evian Masters as a major until 2013, it began co-sanctioning the tournament as a regular tour event in 2000. Because it was played the week before the Women's British Open, and the purse was one of the largest on the LPGA Tour, virtually all top LPGA players played the Evian Masters before its elevation to major status. The Evian Championship has now moved to September.
The LPGA of Japan Tour, which is the second richest women's golf tour, has its own set of four majors: the World Ladies, the Japan Open, the JLPGA Championship and the JLPGA Tour Championship. However, these events attract little notice outside Japan, and to a lesser degree South Korea.

Symetra Tour

Since 2006, the Symetra Tour, the LPGA's developmental tour known through 2011 as the Futures Tour, has designated the Tate & Lyle Players Championship, an event which has been held since 1985, as a major championship. It was the Tour's first $100,000 purse.

Women's senior golf

The Legends of the LPGA Tour, originally the Women's Senior Golf Tour, played its first season in 2001. The U.S. Senior Women's Open and the Senior LPGA Championship are considered to constitute the senior women's major golf championships.
The U.S. Senior Women's Open was established in 2018 and is open to women whose 50th birthday falls on or before the first day of competition. The eligibility for the Senior LPGA Championship, established in 2017, and the Legends of the LPGA Tour are for female golfers age 45 and older.