Atlanta Athletic Club (1976-M, 1990-W)
Baltimore Country Club (1899-M, 1988 W)
Baltusrol GC (1903-M, 1915-M, 1936-M, 1954-M, 1961-W, 1967-M, 1980-M, 1985-W, 1993-M)
Champions GC (1969-M, 2020-W)
Cherry Hills CC (1938-M, 1960-M, 1978-M, 2005-W)
Colonial CC (1941-M, 1991-W)
Erin Hills (2017-M, 2025 W)
Hazeltine National GC (1966-W, 1970-M, 1977-W, 1991-M)
Interlachen CC (1930-M, 2008-W)
Newport Country Club (1895-M, 2006-W)
Oakmont CC (hosted the men 10 times, most recently in 2025, 1992-W, 2010-W)
Olympic Club (1955-M, 1966-M, 1987-M, 1998-M, 2012-M, 2021-W)
Pebble Beach GL (1972-M, 1982-M, 1992-M, 2000-M, 2010-M, 2019-M, 2023-W)
Pinehurst Resort (1999-M, 2005-M, 2014-M, 2014-W, 2024-M)
Winged Foot GC (1929-M, 1957-W, 1959-M, 1972-W, 1974-M, 1984-M, 2006-M, 2020-M)
Worcester CC (1925-M, 1960-W)
The last six U.S. Women’s Opens have been won by players representing six different countries, including one player (Yuka Saso) who has won representing two different countries:
Year Winner Country
2025 Maja Stark Sweden
2024 Yuka Saso Japan
2023 Allisen Corpuz USA
2022 Minjee Lee Australia
2021 Yuka Saso Philippines
2020 Kim A-lim South Korea
It’s the longest such streak in the history of this championship. Consider that during the 11-year period from between 2007 and 2017, the only countries represented by U.S. Women’s Open winners were the United States (4 times) and South Korea (7 times).
Nelly Korda won the first major championship of the year, at the Chevron Championship in April. It was her second Chevron (also winning it in 2024) and third major overall, having won the 2021 KPMG Women's PGA Championship. Winning this week at the U.S. Women's Open at Riviera Country Club would be statistically significant in a few ways:
- No player has won back-to-back major championships since Lydia Ko, at the 2015 Evian Championship and 2016 ANA Inspiration.
- No American player has won back-to-back major championships since Juli Inkster, at the 1999 U.S. Women's Open and McDonald's LPGA Championship.
- No player has won the first two major championships of one calendar year since Inbee Park won each of the first three major championships of 2013 (Kraft Nabisco Championship, Wegman's LPGA Championship and the U.S. Women's Open).
- Only one of the last nine U.S. Women's Opens was won by an American (Allisen Corpuz in 2023).
- Only seven players, including four Americans (Pat Bradley, Juli Inkster, Betsy King and Patty Sheehan), have won all three of the current major championships played on American soil (Chevron, U.S. Women's Open, PGA).
Jeeno Thitikul, currently No. 2 in the Rolex Rankings, held the No. 1 spot for 38 straight weeks before Korda passed her on April 27. Thitikul has already won twice this season after recording at least two LPGA victories in both 2024 and 2025. She is the first player to win multiple tournaments in each of three or more consecutive years since Brooke Henderson (four years, in a row, 2016-2019) and Sung Hyun Park (2017-2019).
Season SG:Putting (per round) Rank
2026 +.012 30th
2025 +1.09 4th
2024 +1.22 2nd
2023 +0.79 12th
2022 +0.73 11th
Thitikul has nine career LPGA Tour victories, but none of them are major championships. She also has nine Top 10 finishes in majors. Among current members of the LPGA, she has the most career victories without a major, ahead of Nasa Hataoka (7) and Jessica Korda (6).
Since 2000, there are three examples of players whose first major championship was their 10th or later overall victory: Lorena Ochoa (her 2007 British Open victory was her first major and her 13th official LPGA win), Sei Young Kim (won the 2020 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship – her 11th victory overall) and Cristie Kerr (her 2007 U.S. Women’s Open title was her 10th official win).
China’s Ruoning Yin, currently ranked No. 4 in the world, has two runner-up finishes this year, including at the Chevron Championship. One of the best short-game players in the world, Yin currently ranks 4th on Tour in Scrambling Pct (65.80%). She is the only player who ranked among the Top 10 in that category in each of the last three years: 2nd in 2023 (66.22%), 8th in 2024 (61.92%) and 7th last year (64.06%).
England’s Lottie Woad, currently ranked No. 5 in the world, is the only player to have finished among the Top 10 in each of the last three major championships: T-3 at the 2025 Amundi Evian Championship, T-8 at the 2025 AIG Women’s Open and T-7 at the Chevron Championship in April.
Australia’s Hannah Green has won twice this season (HSBC Women’s World Championship and JM Eagle LA Championship). Green ranks fourth this season in SG: Putting (+1.08 per round), after finishing 30th in that category last year (+.0.48).
Englishwoman Charley Hull, currently ranked No. 7 in the Rolex Rankings, was ranked as high as No. 3 earlier this season – a new career best. This year marks the fifth season in a row that Hull, now 30 years old, has improved her career best World Ranking. She was as high as No. 32 in 2021, No. 15 in 2022, No. 8 in 2023, No. 7 in 2024 and No. 5 in 2025.
Japan’s Miyu Yamashita is coming off a 2025 season in which she won the Rookie of the Year and finished second to Jeeno Thitikul in the Race to CME Globe. She also won the AIG Women’s Open, becoming the first rookie to win a major since countrywoman Yuka Saso won the 2021 U.S. Open. Players representing Japan have won four of the last 10 major championships. The only other countries with more than one major over the last 24 months are USA (2m) and Australia (2).
Minjee Lee won the Rolex Annika Major Award in 2025, having the best overall performance across all five major championships. She won the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at PGA Frisco before finishing T-3 at the Amundi Evian Championship. Her worst major championship performance was at the U.S. Open, at which she tied for 22nd. Overall, she was 19-under par over all five majors in 2025, far ahead of the second best aggregate score of 10-under by Angel Yin.
Having won 23 career official LPGA events, including eight over the last five years, 29-year-old Lydia Ko is looking for her first victory in 2026. Ko has won three major championships in her Hall-of-Fame career, but only one in the last 10 seasons (2015 Evian Championship, 2016 Ana Inspiration and 2024 AIG Women’s Open).
Maja Stark won the 2025 U.S. Women’s Open at Erin Hills, by two shots over Nelly Korda and Rio Takeda. She became the third Swedish golfer to win this championship, joining Liselotte Neumann (1988) and Annika Sorenstam (1995, 1996 and 2006).
Maja Stark shot 70 (-2) in the first round of last year’s U.S. Women’s Open, entering the second round tied for 12th place. Thirteen of the last 14 champions were among the Top-15 on the leaderboard at the end of the first round. The exception over this time was Sung Hyun Park, who was T-58 after the first round in 2017 at Trump National Bedminster.
Longest active streaks of making the cut at major championships: Nelly Korda (8), Angel Yin (7), Miyu Yamashita (6), Minjee Lee (6), Rio Takeda (6) and Ally Ewing (6).
Longest active streaks of making the cut at the U.S. Women’s Open: Minjee Lee (10), Lizette Salas (9), Hannah Green (7), Ally Ewing (6), Andrea Lee (5), Celine Boutier (5) and Wichanee Meechai (5).
Longest active streaks of Top-20s in major championships: Rio Takeda (3) and Lottie Woad (3).
Over the last 20 years of this championship, the champion, on average, was competing in her sixth career U.S. Women’s Open. Last year’s winner, Maya Stark, was competing in her sixth; as was the 2025 champion, Yuka Saso.

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