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Women's PGA Championship winners

Women's PGA Championship winners

1955 Beverly Hanson, United States
1956 Marlene Hagge, United States
1957 Louise Suggs, United States
1958 Mickey Wright, United States
1959 Betsy Rawls, United States
1960 Mickey Wright, United States
1961 Mickey Wright, United States
1962 Judy Kimball, United States
1963 Mickey Wright, United States
1964 Mary Mills, United States
1965 Sandra Haynie, United States
1966 Gloria Ehret, United States
1967 Kathy Whitworth, United States
1968 Sandra Post, Canada
1969 Betsy Rawls, United States
1970 Shirley Englehorn, United States
1971 Kathy Whitworth, United States
1972 Kathy Ahern, United States
1973 Mary Mills, United States
1974 Sandra Haynie, United States
1975 Kathy Whitworth, United States
1976 Betty Burfeindt, United States
1977 Chako Higuchi, Japan
1978 Nancy Lopez, United States
1979 Donna Caponi, United States
1980 Sally Little, South Africa
1981 Donna Caponi, United States
1982 Jan Stephenson, Australia
1983 Patty Sheehan, United States
1984 Patty Sheehan, United States
1985 Nancy Lopez, United States
1986 Pat Bradley, United States
1987 Jane Geddes, United States
1988 Sherri Turner, United States
1989 Nancy Lopez, United States
1990 Beth Daniel, United States
1991 Meg Mallon, United States
1992 Betsy King, United States
1993 Patty Sheehan, United States
1994 Laura Davies, England
1995 Kelly Robbins, United States
1996 Laura Davies, England
1997 Christa Johnson, United States
1998 Se Ri Pak, South Korea
1999 Juli Inkster, United States
2000 Juli Inkster, United States
2001 Karrie Webb, Australia
2002 Se Ri Pak, South Korea
2003 Annika Sorenstam, Sweden
2004 Annika Sorenstam, Sweden
2005 Annika Sorenstam, Sweden
2006 Se Ri Pak, South Korea
2007 Suzann Pettersen, Norway
2008 Yani Tseng, Taiwan
2009 Anna Nordqvist, Sweden
2010 Cristie Kerr, United States
2011 Yani Tseng, Taiwan
2012 Shanshan Feng, China
2013 Inbee Park, South Korea
2014 Inbee Park, South Korea
2015 Inbee Park, South Korea
2016 Brooke Henderson, Canada
2017 Danielle Kang, United States
2018 Park Sung-hyun, South Korea
2019 Hannah Green, Australia
2020 Kim Sei-young, South Korea
2021 Nelly Korda, United States
2022 Chun In-gee, South Korea
2023 Ruoning Yin, China
2024 Amy Yang, South Korea
2025 Minjee Lee, Australia
Note: Known as LPGA Championship from 1955-2014.
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Japan's Yamashita wins Women's British Open to clinch first major
Japan's Yamashita wins Women's British Open to clinch first major

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  • Yahoo

Japan's Yamashita wins Women's British Open to clinch first major

Japan's Miyu Yamashita won the Women's British Open by two strokes at Royal Porthcawl on Sunday to clinch an emotional first major title. Yamashita carded a two-under par final round to hold off a strong challenge from England's Charley Hull on the Welsh links course. She finished on 11-under par for the tournament, with Hull and Japan's Minami Katsu ending in a tie for second place after final rounds of 69 left them on nine under. Just a day after turning 24, Yamashita became the third Japanese woman to win the British Open after Hinako Shibuno in 2019 and Ayako Okamoto in 1984. She joyously swigged from a bottle of champagne on the 18th green before wiping away tears of joy after sealing her victory. Yamashita's previous best performance in a major was a tie for second place at last year's Women's PGA Championship. She survived a stern test of her temperament on the last day after resuming with a one-stroke lead over South Korea's Kim A-lim. Having posted a bogey-free 65 on Friday, she had carded a two-over par 74 marred by erratic driving off the tee and struggles on the greens in the third round. Yamashita recovered her composure on Sunday as she embarked on a relentless march to the trophy. Prior to this year, Yamashita's highest finish at the Women's British Open was 13th in 2022, but she mastered the Porthcawl course in emphatic fashion. Kim tested Yamashita when she drew level at the top of the leaderboard with a birdie on the second hole. But Yamashita immediately regained the lead when Kim missed two putts to bogey the next hole. England's Mimi Rhodes made a hole-in-one on the fifth when her tee shot hit another ball and deflected in. However, that remarkable moment couldn't seize the spotlight from Yamashita. She moved three shots clear of Kim on the fourth hole with an ice-cool birdie while the South Korean bogeyed. A three-putt bogey on the seventh left Kim's title challenge in tatters. Hull made her charge with three birdies in four holes to pull within a stroke of Yamashita. She had been 11 strokes back at the start of the third round. The largest 36-hole deficit overcome to win any LPGA major all-time is 10 shots, but Yamashita snuffed out any chance of that record being broken. She carded birdies on the eighth and ninth to move three shots ahead. Hull, who finished second at both the British Open and the US Open in 2023, kept fighting. The 29-year-old dropped in an eight-foot birdie putt at the 12th and guided in another birdie to huge roars on the 14th. Yamashita's lead was down to one stroke with five holes left, but as the pressure mounted it was Hull who cracked. She slumped with bogeys on the 16th and 17th to gift the title to the nerveless Yamashita, who embraced her caddie and punched the air in delight after wrapping up the victory. smg/nf

Japan's golden era is here: Miyu Yamashita wins first major at AIG Women's British Open
Japan's golden era is here: Miyu Yamashita wins first major at AIG Women's British Open

USA Today

time18 minutes ago

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Japan's golden era is here: Miyu Yamashita wins first major at AIG Women's British Open

As golf's major season comes to end, the LPGA's historic march of champions rolls on. One day after Japan's Miyu Yamashita celebrated her 24th birthday, the petite Japanese star gave herself what she surely wanted most: a major victory. Yamashita becomes the tour's 21st different winner this season, closing with a 2-under 70 to finish at 11 under and edge out English sensation Charley Hull and compatriot Minami Katsu by two strokes at the 2025 AIG Women's British Open. The record number of champions to this point in the season stands in stark contrast to 2024, when Nelly Korda won seven times and Lydia Ko played her way into the LPGA Hall of Fame. From dominance to diversity, Yamashita becomes the fourth rookie to win on tour this season. 'To win such an historic tournament in front of all these amazing fans is such an incredible feeling,' said Yamashita with the aid of an interpreter. A 13-time winner on the JLPGA, Yamashita is a rookie on the LPGA in name only given her vast success on home soil, including three majors on that tour. She came into the Women's British Open ranked 15th in the world. She leaves with a trophy and a big payday. The first-place prize this year was $1,462,500 out of a record total purse of $9,750,000. The week began with England's newest star Lottie Woad the bookmakers' betting favorite in only her second professional start. A late triple-bogey on Friday halted Woad's bid to win two in a row, but a top-10 finish for a second straight year in this championship is a fine showing, given her recent whirlwind stretch. 'Just walking out from the first tee, I got a loud cheer,' said Woad, 'and I could tell everyone was rooting for me. That was nice.' Woad ultimately took a share of eighth. Yamashita's good fortune started with the pairings, when she found herself grouped with good friend and compatriot Rio Takeda for the first two rounds, a rare opportunity on the LPGA. That comfortable pairing along with the luck of the draw in weather going off late/early in the first two rounds, helped her build a three-shot lead heading into the weekend. On Saturday, however, the straight player with the sweet short game suddenly turned crooked and her putter went ice cold, taking 34 putts. NBC booth analyst Morgan Pressel summed it up best as Yamashita limped home at Royal Porthcawl: "Almost everything has gone wrong for Miyu Yamashita, and she's still in the lead." She stayed on the range late Saturday evening with her father trying to straighten out a two-way miss. Billed as the biggest women's sporting event ever staged in Wales, the crowds were strong all week, even when the weather started out rough on Sunday with rain, wind and cold keeping the early-goers from making much of a move. Perhaps it was Yamashita's cheery yellow sweater that coaxed out the sun late in the afternoon as the leaders made their way along the coast. Stanford's Paula Martin Sampedro showed what was possible down the stretch at Porthcawl, as she put an exclamation point on her week in Wales with a back-nine 30 that included five consecutive birdies. It marked the lowest inward nine for the week by two strokes. The Spaniard, who played alongside two-time Smyth Salver winner Lydia Ko, closed with a 4-under 68 to zoom up the board and cap a summer that included victories at the British Women's Amateur and European Ladies' Amateur Championship in Germany. South Korea's A Lim Kim entered the final round one back and was the only player on the board who'd previously won a major, the 2020 U.S. Women's Open. The powerful, aggressive Kim looked timid in back-to-back bogeys on the third and fourth holes and never posed a serious threat down the stretch. Yamashita, meanwhile, played the first four holes better than most, picking up three strokes on the field with superior scrambling. Whatever ailed her game on Saturday had disappeared. The always-entertaining Hull was 11 back to start the third round and pulled within one of Yamashita, much to the delight of the home crowd. One of the most popular players in the game, Hull came into the week with lower than usual expectations given that she was carted off on a stretcher after fainting several times during the first round of the Amundi Evian Championship three weeks ago in France. The mystery virus caused her to lose both weight and swing speed as she took time off from the gym. Hull also tweaked her back getting something out of her car. For a player who has long been honest about her disklike of links golf, Hull certainly took to Porthcawl and the chance to chase. 'I like hunting someone down,' she said. As the fast-walking, fast-talking Hull electrified crowds with a rare birdie on the most difficult 14th, Yamashita stayed steady, pouring in par putts to keep her advantage. Hull's chances began to wane after back-to-back bogeys on Nos. 16 and 17 as Yamashita's lead ballooned to three strokes with three to play. Once again, the 4-foot-11-inch rookie towered over the field. Yamashita, who leads the tour in scrambling and bogey-free rounds, dropped a shot on the 17th but, after Hull failed to make birdie on the closing par 5, headed to the 72nd hole with a two-stroke cushion. Her two-stroke victory gives Japan bookend titles at the majors, with Mao Saigo winning the first at the Chevron Championship, and four titles on the season from four Japanese different winners. Japan's golden era has only just begun.

Mimi Rhodes sinks hole-in-one off another golf ball at Women's British Open
Mimi Rhodes sinks hole-in-one off another golf ball at Women's British Open

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Mimi Rhodes sinks hole-in-one off another golf ball at Women's British Open

Mimi Rhodes, you wizard. Tip your cap. On Sunday, whether it was designed or not, the young Ladies European Tour golfer masterfully played the par-3, 214-yard Hole 3 during the 2025 AIG Women's British Open at Royal Porthcawl in Porthcawl, Wales, for a hole-in-one. Rhodes' ace, however, didn't come without some help, as it ricocheted off Stephanie Kyriacou's ball that was placed inches away from the hole to bounce in. REQUIRED READING: AIG Women's British Open leaderboard updates: Miyu Yamashita in control down the stretch Noted by Golfweek, part of the USA TODAY Network, it is the second ace this week at the AIG Women's British Open, as Kyriacou made the first ace during Friday's second round competition on the par-3 eighth hole. Despite her ace and several birdies, Rhodes, who has won three events on the LET this season, finished two over par in the final round of competition on Sunday. On the back nine alone, Rhodes recorded two bogies and a double bogey on the par-four sixth hole. At the time of this writing, Rhodes was tied for 19th on the leaderboard at one under par 288. The AIG Women's British Open concludes on Sunday in Wales for the final major of the season. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Mimi Rhodes records hole-in-one at AIG Women's British Open

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