Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:For The men's major golf championships, commonly known as the major championships,<ref name="T32">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and often referred to simply as the majors, are the most prestigious tournaments in golf. Historically, the national open and amateur championships of the United Kingdom and the United States were regarded as the majors. With the rise of professional golf in the middle of the twentieth century, the majors came to refer to the most prestigious professional tournaments.

In modern men's professional golf, there are four globally recognized major championships. Since 2019, the order of competition dates are as follows:

Template:TOC limit

OverviewEdit

Major Month Weekend<ref name=":1">Template:Cite news</ref> Location Organized by Country First tournament Purse Winner's share
in US$ million
Masters Tournament April Weekend ending second Sunday in April Augusta National Golf Club, Augusta, Georgia Template:USA 1934 21 4.2<ref name=":2">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

PGA Championship May One week before U.S. Memorial Day weekend various PGA of America Template:USA 1916 18.5 3.33<ref name=":3">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

U.S. Open June Weekend ending third Sunday in June, or U.S. Father's Day various United States Golf Association Template:USA 1895 21.5 4.3<ref name=":4">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

The Open Championship July Week containing the third Friday in July various (selected links courses within the rotation) The R&A Template:Uk 1860 17.0 3.1<ref name="24Open">Template:Cite press release</ref>

HistoryEdit

The majors originally consisted of two British tournaments, The Open Championship and The Amateur Championship, and two American tournaments, the U.S. Open and the U.S. Amateur. With the introduction of the Masters Tournament in 1934, and the rise of professional golf in the late 1940s and 1950s, the term "major championships" eventually came to describe the Masters, the U.S. Open, the Open Championship, and the PGA Championship. It is difficult to determine when the definition changed to include the current four tournaments, although many trace it to Arnold Palmer's 1960 season. After winning the Masters and the U.S. Open to start the season, he remarked that if he could win the Open Championship and PGA Championship to finish the season, he would complete "a grand slam of his own" to rival Bobby Jones's 1930 feat. Until that time, many U.S. players such as Byron Nelson also considered the Western Open and the North and South Open as two of golf's "majors",<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and the British PGA Matchplay Championship was as important to British and Commonwealth professionals as the PGA Championship was to Americans.

During the 1950s, the short-lived World Championship of Golf was viewed as a "major" by its competitors, as its first prize was worth almost ten times any other event in the game, and it was the first event whose finale was televised live on U.S. television. The oldest of the majors is The Open Championship, commonly referred to as the "British Open" outside the United Kingdom. Dominated by American champions in the 1920s and 1930s, the comparative explosion in the riches available on the U.S. Tour from the 1940s onwards meant that the lengthy overseas trip needed to qualify and compete in the event became increasingly prohibitive for the leading American professionals. Their regular participation dwindled after the war years. Ben Hogan entered just once in 1953 and won, but never returned. Sam Snead won in 1946 but lost money on the trip (first prize was $600) and did not return until 1962.

Golf writer Dan Jenkins, who was often seen as the world authority on majors since he had attended more (200+) than anyone else, once noted that "the pros didn't talk much about majors back then. I think it was Herbert Warren Wind who starting using the term. He said golfers had to be judged by the major tournaments they won, but it's not like there was any set number of major tournaments."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In 1960, Arnold Palmer entered The Open Championship in an attempt to emulate Hogan's 1953 feat of winning on his first visit. Though a runner-up by a stroke in his first attempt, Palmer returned and won the next two in 1961 and 1962. Scheduling difficulties persisted with the PGA Championship, but more Americans began competing in the 1960s, restoring the event's prestige (and with it the prize money that once made it an attractive prospect to other American pros). The advent of transatlantic jet travel helped to boost American participation in The Open. A discussion between Palmer and Pittsburgh golf writer Bob Drum led to the concept of the modern Grand Slam of Golf.<ref name="slam">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In August 2017, after the previous year's edition was scheduled earlier due to golf at the 2016 Summer Olympics, the PGA of America announced that the PGA Championship would be moved to late-May beginning in 2019, in between the Masters and U.S. Open. The PGA Tour concurrently announced that it would move the Players Championship back to March the same year; as a result, the Players and the four majors will still be played across five consecutive months.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref name=":0">Template:Cite magazine</ref>

ImportanceEdit

The four majors – the Masters Tournament, the PGA Championship, the U.S. Open, and the Open Championship – are golf's most prestigious events. Elite players from all over the world participate in them, and the reputations of the greatest players in golf history are largely based on the number and variety of major championship victories they accumulate. Winning a major boosts a player's career far more than winning any other tournament. If he is already a leading player, he will probably receive large bonuses from his sponsors and may be able to negotiate better contracts. If he is an unknown, he will immediately be signed up. Perhaps more importantly, he will receive an exemption from the need to annually re-qualify for a tour card on his home tour, thus giving a tournament golfer some security in an unstable profession. He also is automatically invited to every other major championship for the next five years, and receives an exemption into the major he just won as well; depending on the major won, he can receive at minimum a 10-year exemption, and at maximum a lifetime exemption into the major.<ref>Previous winners of the Masters Tournament and the PGA Championship are granted lifetime exemptions. The U.S. Open grants a ten year exemption, and the Open Championship grants an exemption until the age of 55.</ref> Currently, both the PGA Tour and European Tour give a five-year exemption to all major winners and they receive the highest priority in those rankings.

Independent organizations, and not the PGA Tour, operate each of the majors. Three of the four majors take place in the United States. The Masters is played at the same course, Augusta National Golf Club, every year, while the other three rotate courses (the Open Championship, however, is always played on a links course). Each of the majors has a distinct history, and they are run by four separate golf organizations, but their special status is recognized worldwide. Major championship winners receive the maximum possible allocation of 100 points from the Official World Golf Ranking, which is endorsed by all of the main tours, and major championship prize money is official on the three richest regular (i.e. under-50) golf tours, the PGA Tour, European Tour and Japan Golf Tour.

The top prizes of each of the majors are not actually the largest in golf, being surpassed by The Players Championship, three of the four World Golf Championships events (the HSBC Champions, promoted to WGC status in 2009, has a top prize comparable to that of the majors), and some other invitational events. The Players Championship historically has offered a prize pool as large as or larger than the majors, because the PGA Tour wants its most important event to be as attractive.<ref name="ap20200125">Template:Cite news</ref> Although the majors are considered prestigious due to their history and traditions, besides The Players there are still other non-"major" tournaments which prominently feature top players competing for purses meeting or exceeding those of the four traditional majors, such as the European Tour's DP World Tour Championship, Dubai,Template:R and World Golf Championships. With its large prize fund of any golf event and role as PGA Tour's flagship tournament, The Players is frequently considered to be an unofficial "fifth major" by players and critics. After the announcement that the Evian Masters would be recognized as the fifth women's major by the LPGA Tour, players objected to the concept of having a fifth men's major, owing to the long-standing traditions that the existing four have established.<ref name="nyt-fifthmajor">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="forbes-playersfifth">Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Distinctive characteristics of majorsEdit

Because each major was developed and is run by a different organization, each has characteristics that sets it apart. These involve the character of the courses used, the composition of the field, and other idiosyncrasies.

Masters TournamentEdit

The Masters Tournament (sometimes referred to as the U.S. Masters), the season's first major championship, is the only major that is played at the same course every year (Augusta National Golf Club), being the invitational tournament of that club. First staged in 1934 as the "Augusta National Invitation Tournament" (formally adopting its present name in 1939), it is the most recent men's major championship to be founded.

The Masters invites the smallest field of the majors, generally under 100 players (although, like all the majors, it now ensures entry for all golfers among the world's top 50 before the event), and is the only one of the four majors that does not use "alternates" to replace qualified players who do not enter the event (usually due to injury). Also, its 36-hole cut is set at roughly the top 50 players and ties—the smallest of any major, though not the smallest when measured by percentage of the original field.<ref name="Friday24US">Template:Cite news</ref> Former champions have a lifetime invitation to compete, and also included in the field are the current champions of the major amateur championships, and most of the previous year's PGA Tour winners (although winners of "alternate" events held opposite a high-profile tournament do not receive automatic invitations).

The traditions of Augusta during Tournament week, such as the Champion's Dinner, Par 3 Contest, and awarding of a green jacket to the champion, create a distinctive character for the tournament, as does the course itself, with its lack of primary rough but severely undulating fairways and greens, traditional pin placements, and punitive use of ponds and creeks on several key holes on the back nine

PGA ChampionshipEdit

The PGA Championship (sometimes referred to as the U.S. PGA), which since 2019 has been the year's second major, was established in 1916 and is traditionally played at a parkland club in the United States. The courses chosen tend to be as difficult as those chosen for the U.S. Open, with several, such as Baltusrol Golf Club, Medinah Country Club, Oakland Hills Country Club, Oak Hill Country Club, and Winged Foot Golf Club, having hosted both. The PGA generally does not set up the course to be as difficult as the USGA does. The PGA of America enters into a profit-sharing agreement with the host club. An exception was in 2014, when the tournament was held at Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky, a club that the PGA of America fully owned at the time.

As with The Masters, previous winners of the PGA Championship have a lifetime invitation to compete. As well as inviting recent champions of the other three professional majors and leading players from the world rankings, the PGA Championship field is completed by qualifiers held among members of the PGA of America, the organization of club and teaching professionals that are separate from the members of the PGA Tour. The PGA Championship is also the only one of the four majors to invite all winners of PGA Tour events in the year preceding the tournament, as well as inviting 20 club professionals who are non-tour regulars. Amateur golfers do not normally play on the PGA Tour, and could only qualify by winning one of the other three majors, winning a PGA Tour event while playing under a sponsor's exemption, or having a high world ranking.

When the PGA Championship was held in August, it was frequently affected by the high heat and humidity that characterize the summer climate of much of the U.S., which often set it apart as a challenge from (in particular) the Open Championship, an event often played in cooler and rainy weather. With the 2019 move to a May date, heat and humidity are less likely to have major effects on the competition.

U.S. OpenEdit

The third major, the U.S. Open, was first played in 1895 and is notorious for being played on difficult courses that have tight fairways, challenging greens, demanding pin positions and thick and high rough, placing a great premium on accuracy, especially with driving and approach play. Additionally, while most regular tour events are played on courses with par 72, the U.S. Open has almost never been held on a par-72 course in recent decades; the 2017 event was the first since 1992 to be played at par 72.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> During this time, the tournament course has occasionally been played to a par of 71 but most commonly par 70. The U.S. Open is rarely won with a score much under par.

The event is the championship of the United States Golf Association, and in having a very strict exempt qualifiers list – made up of recent major champions, professionals currently ranked high in the world rankings or on the previous year's money lists around the world, and leading amateurs from recent USGA events – about half of the 156-person field still enters the tournament through two rounds of open qualification events, mostly held in the U.S. but also in Europe and Japan. The U.S. Open has no barrier to entry for either women or junior players, as long as they are a professional or meet amateur handicap requirements. As of 2024, however, no female golfer has yet qualified for the U.S. Open, although in 2006 Michelle Wie made it to the second qualifying stage. Finally, the U.S. Open has the strictest 36-hole cut of any major championship (by percentage of the field), with only the top 60 players and ties of the 156-player field playing the final two days.<ref name="Friday24US" />

While the U.S. Open employed an 18-hole playoff for many years if players were tied after four rounds, the USGA announced that beginning in 2018 all of its future championships would implement a two-hole aggregate playoff format. A sudden-death playoff would follow if the players were still tied after the two playoff holes.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> This change also brought the U.S. Open more in line with both the Open and PGA Championships, which use three-hole aggregate playoffs (the Open previously used a four-hole playoff from 1989 to 2018 before reducing to the current three-hole playoff in 2019), followed by sudden death if necessary, and most regular events as well as the Masters only have simple sudden-death playoffs. The Sunday of the Championship has also in recent years fallen on Father's Day (at least as recognized in the US and the UK) which has lent added poignancy to winners' speeches.

The Open ChampionshipEdit

The year's final major, The Open Championship (sometimes referred to as the British Open), is organized by The R&A, an offshoot of The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews, and is typically played on a links-style course in the United Kingdom (primarily Scotland or England) according to the tournament's official course rotation. First contested in 1860, it carries the prestige of being the oldest professional golf tournament currently in existence and the original "Open" championship (although the very first event was held only for British professionals). It is respected for maintaining the tradition of links play that dates back to the very invention of the game in Scotland. Links courses are generally typified as coastal, flat and often very windswept, with the fairways cut through dune grass and gorse bushes that make up the "rough", and have deep bunkers. The course is generally not "doctored" to make it more difficult, effectively making the variable weather the main external influence on the field's score.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Also, the greens at Open venues tend to be set up to play more slowly than those of normal tour stops. In windy conditions, a course with fast greens can become unplayable because the wind could affect balls at rest; the third round of the 2015 Open saw many delays for this very reason.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

As well as exempting from qualifying recent professional major and amateur champions, all former Open Championship winners under age 60 (with the age cutoff being reduced to 55 for those winning their first Open in 2024 or later), and leading players from the world rankings, the R&A ensures that leading golfers from around the globe are given the chance to enter by holding qualifying events on all continents, as well as holding final qualifying events around the UK in the weeks before the main tournament.

The champion receives (and has his name inscribed on the base of) the famous Claret Jug, a trophy that dates back to 1872 (champions from 1860 until 1871 received instead a championship belt, much like a champion professional boxer's belt nowadays) and the engraving of the champions' name on the trophy before them receiving it is, in itself, one of the traditions of the closing ceremony of the championship, as is the award of the silver medal to the leading amateur player to have made the cut to play the last 36 holes.

Television coverageEdit

United KingdomEdit

Event Networks
Masters Tournament Sky Sports
PGA Championship
U.S. Open
The Open Championship

In the United Kingdom, historically all four majors were broadcast on free to air TV. ITV has not broadcast live golf for many years. The BBC used to be the exclusive TV home of the Masters Tournament, U.S. Open and the Open Championship. By the early years of the first decade of the 21st century, only the Masters and Open Championship were broadcast live on the BBC. From 2011 onwards Sky Sports has exclusive live coverage of the first two days of the Masters, with the weekend rounds shared with the BBC. The U.S. Open is shown exclusively on Sky Sports. Beginning in 2016, Sky Sports also became the exclusive broadcaster of the Open Championship; the BBC elected to forego the final year of its contract.<ref name="sbj-nbcopenearly" /> The BBC continues to hold rights to broadcast a nightly highlights programme.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Sky also held rights to the PGA Championship, but in July 2017, it was reported that the PGA of America had declined to renew its contract, seeking a different media model for the tournament in the United Kingdom.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The 2017 tournament was aired by the BBC (via BBC Red Button, with the conclusion of coverage on BBC Two) and streamed by GiveMeSport (via Facebook Live).<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Eleven Sports UK & Ireland acquired the event for 2018, as one of the first events covered by the newly launched streaming service.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

United StatesEdit

Event Networks
Masters Tournament ESPN/CBS
PGA Championship
U.S. Open USA Network/NBC
The Open Championship

As none of the majors fall under the direct jurisdiction of tours, broadcast rights for these events are negotiated separately with each sanctioning body. However, as of 2020, network television coverage of all four tournaments is split equally between the PGA Tour's two main television partners, CBS and NBC.

The Masters operates under one-year contracts; CBS has been the main TV partner every year since 1956, with ESPN broadcasting CBS-produced coverage of the first and second rounds since 2008 (replacing USA Network, which had shown the event since the early 1980s).<ref name="nyt-espnreplacesusa">Template:Cite news</ref>

Beginning in 1966, ABC obtained the broadcast rights for the other three majors and held them for a quarter century. The PGA Championship moved to CBS in 1991 and the U.S. Open returned to NBC in 1995.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> ABC retained The Open Championship as its sole major, but moved its live coverage on the weekend to sister cable network ESPN in 2010. In June 2015, it was announced that NBC and Golf Channel would acquire rights to the Open Championship under a 12-year deal.<ref name="sbj-nbcbritishopen">Template:Cite journal</ref> While the NBC deal was originally to take effect in 2017, ESPN chose to opt out of its final year of Open rights, so the NBC contract took effect beginning in 2016 instead.<ref name="sbj-nbcopenearly">Template:Cite news</ref>

As of 2020, NBC and Golf Channel hold broadcast rights to the U.S. Open and other USGA events, replacing Fox Sports — which had assumed the rights in 2015 under a 12-year contract, but withdrew and sold the remainder of the rights to NBC in June 2020.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

As of 2020, CBS and ESPN hold the broadcast rights to the PGA Championship, under a new contract that replaces TNT as the tournament's cable partner.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In November 2021, NBC announced that early round and early-weekend coverage of the U.S. Open and the Open Championship would move from Golf Channel to USA Network beginning in 2022.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Major championship winnersEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

File:JackNicklaus.jpg
Jack Nicklaus won a record 18 major championships.

RecordsEdit

Scoring recordsEdit

Winning total (aggregate)Edit

The aggregate scoring records for each major are tabulated below, listed in order of when the majors are scheduled annually.

Date Tournament Player Rounds Score To par
Nov 15, 2020 Masters Tournament Template:Flagicon Dustin Johnson 65-70-65-68 268 −20
May 19, 2024 PGA Championship Template:Flagicon Template:Sortname 62-68-68-65 263 −21
Jun 19, 2011 U.S. Open Template:Flagicon Template:Sortname 65-66-68-69 268 −16
Jul 17, 2016 The Open Championship Template:Flagicon Template:Sortname 68-65-68-63 264 −20

Winning total (to par)Edit

The scoring records to par for each major are tabulated below, listed in order of when the majors are scheduled annually.

Date Tournament Player Rounds Score To par
Nov 15, 2020 Masters Tournament Template:Flagicon Dustin Johnson 65-70-65-68 268 −20
May 19, 2024 PGA Championship Template:Flagicon Template:Sortname 62-68-68-65 263 −21
Jun 19, 2011 U.S. Open Template:Flagicon Template:Sortname 65-66-68-69 268 −16
Jun 18, 2017 Template:Flagicon Template:Sortname 67-70-68-67 272
Jul 17, 2016 The Open Championship Template:Flagicon Template:Sortname 68-65-68-63 264 −20
Jul 17, 2022 Template:Flagicon Template:Sortname 67-64-73-64 268

Largest margins of victoryEdit

Major championships have been won by a margin of nine strokes or greater on eight occasions. On a further eight occasions, majors have been won by a margin of eight strokes; this includes Rory McIlroy's victory in the 2012 PGA Championship at the Kiawah Island Golf Resort, which is the PGA Championship event record.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Nationality Player Margin Major Course
Template:USA Template:Sortname 15 2000 U.S. Open Pebble Beach
Template:SCO Template:Sortname 13 1862 Open Championship Prestwick
Template:SCO Template:Sortname 12 1870 Open Championship Prestwick
Template:USA Template:Sortname 12 1997 Masters Augusta National
Template:SCO Template:Sortname 11 1869 Open Championship Prestwick
Template:SCO Template:Sortname 11 1899 U.S. Open Baltimore
Template:ENG Template:Sortname 9 1921 U.S. Open Columbia
Template:USA Template:Sortname 9 1965 Masters Augusta National

Single round recordsEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The record for a single round in a major championship is 62, which was first recorded by South African golfer Branden Grace in the third round of the 2017 Open Championship and equaled by Americans Rickie Fowler and Xander Schauffele in the first round of the 2023 U.S. Open. In the first round of the 2024 PGA Championship, Schauffele became the first player to have multiple rounds of 62 in major championships. In the third round of that same tournament, Shane Lowry became the fourth player to record a 62 at a major championship after missing a birdie putt on the 18th hole that was for a 61

Consecutive victoriesEdit

Nationality Player Major # Years
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 4 1868, 1869, 1870, 1872Template:Ref label
Template:Flag Template:Sortname PGA Championship 4 1924, 1925, 1926, 1927
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 3 1877, 1878, 1879
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 3 1880, 1881, 1882
Template:Flag Template:Sortname U.S. Open 3 1903, 1904, 1905
Template:Flag Peter Thomson The Open Championship 3 1954, 1955, 1956
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 1861, 1862
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 1898, 1899
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 1905, 1906
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 1894, 1895
Template:Flag Template:Sortname U.S. Open 2 1911, 1912
Template:Flag Template:Sortname PGA Championship 2 1916, 1919Template:Ref label
Template:Flag Template:Sortname PGA Championship 2 1922, 1923
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 1926, 1927
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 1928, 1929
Template:Flag Template:Sortname PGA Championship 2 1928, 1929
Template:Flag Template:Sortname U.S. Open 2 1929, 1930
Template:Flag Template:Sortname PGA Championship 2 1936, 1937
Template:Flag Template:Sortname U.S. Open 2 1937, 1938
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 1949, 1950
Template:Flag Template:Sortname U.S. Open 2 1950, 1951
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 1961, 1962
Template:Flag Template:Sortname Masters Tournament 2 1965, 1966
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 1971, 1972
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 1982, 1983
Template:Flag Template:Sortname U.S. Open 2 1988, 1989
Template:Flag Template:Sortname Masters Tournament 2 1989, 1990
Template:Flag Template:Sortname PGA Championship 2 1999, 2000
Template:Flag Template:Sortname Masters Tournament 2 2001, 2002
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 2005, 2006
Template:Flag Template:Sortname PGA Championship (2) 2 2006, 2007
Template:Flag Template:Sortname The Open Championship 2 2007, 2008
Template:Flag Template:Sortname U.S. Open 2 2017, 2018
Template:Flag Template:Sortname PGA Championship 2 2018, 2019

Template:Note label These are consecutive because there was no The Open Championship in 1871 and no PGA Championship in 1917 and 1918.

Wire-to-wire victoriesEdit

Players who have led or been tied for the lead after each round of a major.

Template:Col-begin Template:Col-break

  • Outright leader after every round
Nationality Player Year Major
Template:Flag Ted Ray 1912 Open
Template:USA Walter Hagen 1914 U.S.
Template:ENG Jim Barnes 1921
Template:USA Bobby Jones 1927 Open
Gene Sarazen 1932
Template:ENG Henry Cotton 1934
Template:USA Craig Wood 1941 Masters
Ben Hogan 1953 U.S.
Arnold Palmer 1960 Masters
Bobby Nichols 1964 PGA
Template:ENG Tony Jacklin 1970 U.S.
Template:USA Jack Nicklaus 1971 PGA
1972 Masters
Tom Weiskopf 1973 Open
Raymond Floyd 1976 Masters
1982 PGA
Hal Sutton 1983
Tiger Woods 2000 U.S.
2002
2005 Open
Template:NIR Rory McIlroy 2011 U.S.
{{#invoke:flag Germany}} Martin Kaymer 2014
Template:NIR Rory McIlroy Open
Template:USA Jordan Spieth 2015 Masters
Brooks Koepka 2019 PGA

Template:Col-break

  • At least tied for the lead at the end of every round
Nationality Player Year Major
Template:SCO Willie Anderson 1903 U.S.
Alex Smith 1906
Template:USA Chick Evans 1916
Tommy Bolt 1958
Arnold Palmer 1964 Masters
Raymond Floyd 1969 PGA
Jack Nicklaus 1972 U.S.
Hubert Green 1977
{{#invoke:flag Spain}} Seve Ballesteros 1980 Masters
Template:USA Jack Nicklaus U.S.
Payne Stewart 1991
Template:ZIM Nick Price 1994 PGA
Template:US Tiger Woods 2000
Template:ZAF Retief Goosen 2001 U.S.
Template:USA Phil Mickelson 2005 PGA
Template:ZAF Trevor Immelman 2008 Masters
Template:USA Jimmy Walker 2016 PGA
Jordan Spieth 2017 Open
Dustin Johnson 2020 Masters
Xander Schauffele 2024 PGA

Template:Col-end

Top ten finishes in all four modern majors in one seasonEdit

It was rare, before the early 1960s, for the leading players from around the world to have the opportunity to compete in all four of the "modern" majors in one season, because of the different qualifying criteria used in each at the time, the costs of traveling to compete (in an era when tournament prize money was very low, and only the champion himself would earn the chance of ongoing endorsements), and on occasion even the conflicting scheduling of the Open and PGA Championships. In 1937, the U.S. Ryder Cup side all competed in The Open Championship, but of those who finished in the top ten of that event, only Ed Dudley could claim a "top ten" finish in all four of the majors in 1937, if his defeat in the last-16 round of that year's PGA Championship (then at match play) was considered a "joint 9th" position.

Following 1960, when Arnold Palmer's narrowly failed bid to add the Open Championship to his Masters and U.S. Open titles (and thus emulate Hogan's 1953 "triple crown") helped to establish the concept of the modern professional "Grand Slam", it has become commonplace for the leading players to be invited to, and indeed compete in, all four majors each year. Even so, those who have recorded top-ten finishes in all four, in a single year, remains a small and select group.

Nationality Player Year Wins Major championship results Lowest
placing
Masters U.S. Open Open Ch. PGA Ch.
Template:USA Ed Dudley 1937 0^ 3rd 5th 6th R16 R16
Template:USA Arnold Palmer 1960 2 1 1 2nd T7 T7
Template:Flag Gary Player 1963 0 T5 T8 T7 T8 T8
Template:USA Arnold Palmer (2) 1966 0 T4 2nd T8 T6 T8
Template:USA Doug Sanders 1966 0^ T4 T8 T2 T6 T8
Template:USA Miller Barber 1969 0^ 7th T6 10th T5 10th
Template:USA Jack Nicklaus 1971 1 T2 2nd T5 1 T5
Template:USA Jack Nicklaus (2) 1973 1 T3 T4 4th 1 T4
Template:USA Jack Nicklaus (3) 1974 0 T4 T10 3rd 2nd T10
Template:Flag Gary Player (2) 1974 2 1 T8 1 7th T8
Template:USA Hale Irwin 1975 0 T4 T3 T9 T5 T9
Template:USA Jack Nicklaus (4) 1975 2 1 T7 T3 1 T7
Template:USA Tom Watson 1975 1 T8 T9 1 9th T9
Template:USA Jack Nicklaus (5) 1977 0 2nd T10 2nd 3rd T10
Template:USA Tom Watson (2) 1977 2 1 T7 1 T6 T7
Template:USA Tom Watson (3) 1982 2 T5 1 1 T9 T9
Template:USA Ben Crenshaw 1987 0 T4 T4 T4 T7 T7
Template:USA Tiger Woods 2000 3 5th 1 1 1 5th
{{#invoke:flag Spain}} Sergio García 2002 0 8th 4th T8 10th 10th
Template:ZAF Ernie Els 2004 0 2nd T9 2nd T4 T9
Template:USA Phil Mickelson 2004 1 1 2nd 3rd T6 T6
Template:FIJ Vijay Singh 2005 0 T5 T6 T5 T10 T10
Template:USA Tiger Woods (2) 2005 2 1 2nd 1 T4 T4
Template:USA Rickie Fowler 2014 0^ T5 T2 T2 T3 T5
Template:USA Jordan Spieth 2015 2 1 1 T4 2nd T4
Template:USA Brooks Koepka 2019 1 T2 2nd T4 1 T4
{{#invoke:flag Spain}} Jon Rahm 2021 1 T5 1 T3 T8 T8
Template:NIR Rory McIlroy 2022 0 2nd T5 3 8 8
Template:USA Xander Schauffele 2024 2 8 T7 1 1 8

^ Never won a regular tour major championship in his career.

On 14 of the 29 occasions the feat has been achieved, the player in question did not win a major that year – indeed, three of the players (Dudley, Sanders and Barber) failed to win a major championship in their careers (although Barber would go on to win five senior majors), and Fowler has also yet to win one.

Multiple victories in a calendar yearEdit

FourEdit

ThreeEdit

  • 1953: Template:Flagicon Ben Hogan; Masters Tournament, U.S. Open, and The Open Championship; he was unable to play in both the Open Championship and the PGA Championship because the dates effectively overlapped.
  • 2000: Template:Flagicon Tiger Woods; U.S. Open, The Open Championship, and PGA Championship

TwoEdit

Masters and U.S. OpenEdit
Masters and Open ChampionshipEdit
Masters and PGA ChampionshipEdit
U.S. Open and Open ChampionshipEdit
U.S. Open and PGA ChampionshipEdit
Open Championship and PGA ChampionshipEdit

Consecutive victories (spanning years)Edit

FourEdit

ThreeEdit

TwoEdit

Note: The order in which the majors were contested varied between 1895 and 1953. Before 1916, the PGA Championship did not exist; Before 1934, the Masters did not exist. From 1954 through 2018, the order of the majors was Masters, U.S. Open, Open Championship, PGA except in 1971, when the PGA was played before the Masters. From 2019, the order has been Masters, PGA, U.S. Open, Open Championship.

Most runner-up finishesEdit

For the purposes of this section a runner-up is defined as someone who either (i) tied for the lead after 72 holes (or 36 holes in the case of the early championships) but lost the playoff or (ii) finished alone or in a tie for second place. In a few instances players have been involved in a playoff for the win or for second place prize money and have ended up taking the third prize (e.g. 1870 Open Championship, 1966 Masters Tournament). For match play PGA Championships up to 1957 the runner-up is the losing finalist.

Along with his record 18 major victories, Jack Nicklaus also holds the record for most runner-up finishes in major championships, with 19, including a record 7 at the Open Championship. Phil Mickelson has the second most with 12 runner-up finishes after the 2023 Masters, which includes a record 6 runner-up finishes at the U.S. Open, the one major he has never won. Nicklaus and Mickelson are the only golfers with multiple runner-up finishes in all four majors. Arnold Palmer had 10 second places, including 3 in the major he never won, the PGA Championship. There have been three golfers with 8 runner-up finishes – Sam Snead, Greg Norman and Tom Watson. Norman shares the distinction of having lost playoffs in each of the four majors with Craig Wood (who lost the 1934 PGA final – at match play – on the second extra hole).

Most runner-up finishes without a victoryEdit

Template:Note label Crampton was second to Jack Nicklaus on each occasion.

Most appearancesEdit

Starts Name Country Wins Span
164 Jack Nicklaus Template:USA 18 1957–2005
150 Gary Player Template:ZAF 9 1956–2009
145 Tom Watson Template:USA 8 1970–2016
142 Arnold Palmer Template:USA 7 1953–2004
127 Raymond Floyd Template:USA 4 1963–2009
Phil Mickelson Template:USA 6 1990–2025
118 Sam Snead Template:USA 7 1937–1983
117 Ben Crenshaw Template:USA 2 1970–2015
115 Gene Sarazen Template:USA 7 1920–1976
112 Bernhard Langer {{#invoke:flag Germany}} 2 1976–2025
110 Mark O'Meara Template:USA 2 1980–2018
109 Tom Kite Template:USA 1 1970–2004
108 Ernie Els Template:ZAF 4 1989–2024
106 Fred Couples Template:USA 1 1979–2025
101 Sergio García {{#invoke:flag Spain}} 1 1996–2025
Davis Love III Template:USA 1 1986–2020
Sandy Lyle Template:SCO 2 1974–2023
Vijay Singh Template:FIJ 3 1989–2024
100 Nick Faldo Template:ENG 6 1976–2015

Lee Westwood holds the record for the most major championship appearances without a victory, with 91 starts.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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