Maude-Aimée LeBlanc


Maude-Aimée LeBlanc is a Canadian professional golfer and LPGA Tour player.

Early years, education and amateur career

LeBlanc was born in Sherbrooke, Quebec and started playing in golf tournaments at age 9. She was a member of the Canadian National Team for six years and participated in the Canadian Women's Open as an amateur in 2006, 2008 and 2009, notably paired with fellow teenager Michelle Wie in 2008.
She represented Canada at the 2008 Espirito Santo Trophy in Adelaide, Australia, helping her team to a fourth-place finish and finishing fourth individually, 8 strokes behind Caroline Hedwall. She reached the quarterfinals of the British Ladies Amateur in Scotland, and finished fourth at the Canadian Women's Amateur.
LeBlanc enrolled at Purdue University in 2007 as a psychology major and played with the Purdue Boilermakers women's golf team, alongside Paula Reto and Laura Gonzalez Escallon. She was named Big Ten Freshman of the Year. As a junior, she earned the Mary Fossum Award for lowest stroke average in the Big Ten Conference, and led Purdue to victory in the 2010 NCAA Division I Women's Golf Championships.

Professional career

LeBlanc turned professional in June 2011. She finished tied for 7th at the LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament, and joined the LPGA Tour for the 2012 season. In her rookie season, she led the tour in driving distance with an average of 282.6 yards.
In 2016, she tied for 26th at the 2016 U.S. Women's Open, and in 2017 she finished tied 7th ISPS Handa Women's Australian Open, again leading the tour in average driving distance with 279.26 yards.
Struggling to fully establish herself on the LPGA Tour after sustaining a back injury in 2012, LeBlanc also played on the Symetra Tour, where she was runner-up at the 2015 Guardian Retirement Championship and the 2019 The CDPHP Open.
On the 2021 Symetra Tour, she was runner-up at the IOA Championship, Copper Rock Championship and Island Resort Championship to finish sixth on the Race for the Card money list and earn LPGA Tour membership for 2022.
On the 2022 LPGA Tour, she recorded three top-10 finishes, including a tie for 4th at the JTBC Classic. She finished tied 8th at the Women's Scottish Open after starting the day a stroke behind leaders Céline Boutier and Lydia Ko, and playing in the final group on the last day of the tournament.
A year ahead of the 2024 Summer Olympics, LeBlanc sat second in the qualification rankings for Canada, on course to represent her country alongside Brooke Henderson, but ultimately lost the spot to Alena Sharp.
In December 2025 LeBlanc secured her card for the 2026 LPGA Tour at Q-Series.

Amateur wins

Source:

Results in LPGA majors

Results not in chronological order.
Tournament2012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024
Chevron ChampionshipCUTCUTCUT
U.S. Women's OpenT50T2670T58
Women's PGA ChampionshipT36WDT58T31T71
The Evian Championship^63NTCUT
Women's British Open69CUT

^ The Evian Championship was added as a major in 2013
CUT = missed the half-way cut
WD = withdrew
NT = no tournament
T = tied

Team appearances

Amateur