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Charley Hull

English professional golfer (born 1996)

Charley Hull

English professional golfer (born 1996)

FieldValue
nameCharley Hull
image2013 Women's British Open – Charley Hull (6).jpg
captionHull at the 2013 Women's British Open
fullnameCharley Esmee Hull
birth_date
birth_placeKettering, Northamptonshire, England
death_date
height
sporting_nationality
spouse
yearpro2013
tourLadies European Tour
LPGA Tour
extour
prowins8
lpgawins3
letwins4
jlpgawins
klpgawins
lagtwins
alpgwins
futwins
otherwins1
majorwins
nabiscoT2: 2016
lpgaT6: 2018
wusopenT2: 2023
wbritopen2nd/T2: 2023, 2025
evianT3: 2022
wghofid
wghofyear
award1Ladies European Tour
Rookie of the Year
year12013
award2Best International Newcomer,
SJA British Sports Awards
year22013
award3Ladies European Tour
Order of Merit
year32014
award4Ladies European Tour
Player of the Year
year42014
awardssection
module{{Infobox personembed=yes
signatureCharley_Hull_signature.jpg

LPGA Tour Rookie of the Year](let-rookie-of-the-year) SJA British Sports Awards Order of Merit](let-order-of-merit) Player of the Year](let-player-of-the-year) Charley Esmee Hull (born 20 March 1996) is an English professional golfer who has won tournaments on both the Ladies European Tour (LET) and the LPGA Tour.

Aged nine, Hull won the Ladies Golf Union Championship, playing against adults. She went on to have a successful amateur career, winning several national titles, and she was selected by Europe for the Junior Solheim Cup in 2011, and by Great Britain and Ireland for the Curtis Cup in 2012. Hull turned professional in 2013, and after ten top-10 finishes and a debut appearance at the 2013 Solheim Cup (the then youngest ever competitor at the tournament), she was named LET Rookie of the Year. Her first LET title was achieved at the 2014 Lalla Meryem Cup, and she won the LET Order of Merit at the end of the same year. Hull won her first LPGA title in 2016 at the Tour Championship. She won further LET titles in 2019, 2021 and 2024, and she won her second LPGA title at the Volunteers of America Classic in 2022.

Hull has won eight professional titles during her career, including three on the LPGA Tour, and four on the LET. She has ten top-10 finishes in majors, and has finished runner-up on four occasions: at the 2016 ANA Inspiration, the 2023 U.S. Women's Open, the 2023 Women's British Open, and the 2025 Women's British Open. Hull has competed in seven Solheim Cups, winning three, and has a career high year-end world ranking of eighth.

Early life and career influences

Hull was first introduced to golf when she was two years old, and she began playing with her father at Kettering Golf Club. She joined Woburn Golf Club aged nine or ten and later left school at the age of thirteen to be home-schooled. Hull has stated that once she started home-schooling, she focused on golf ahead of her studies, saying "I was playing golf from 9am to 3pm every day." While discussing her role models, Hull has said that when she was young she looked up to Laura Davies, with Davies herself acknowledging similarities in their style of play. Speaking about Hull, Davies has observed "She plays golf the way I played golf...She gets her driver out on pretty much every hole, goes for pins and isn't scared of messing things up." Hull has also cited Seve Ballesteros as a role model.

Amateur career

Hull came to public attention aged nine, when she won the Ladies Golf Union Championship at Turnberry, competing against adults. During the event, she scored 28 stableford points from a handicap of 26. Aged ten, she played alongside Morgan Pressel in the British Open Pro-Am. Hull then won several amateur events in Great Britain and the United States and became ranked in the top-10 of the World Amateur Golf Rankings. She won the English Girls under-13 title in July 2008, and in March 2010 she won the Leveret at Formby Ladies. In January 2011, she travelled to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where she was victorious in the Jones-Doherty match-play Championship, and in May 2011, she won the Welsh Women's Open Stroke Play Championship. She followed this up by triumphing in the English Women's Open Amateur Stroke Play Championship in August, and was then selected to represent Europe in the 2011 Junior Solheim Cup. Hull lost all three of her matches in the tournament, including a 2 and 1 loss to Lindsey Weaver in the singles. The event concluded with the United States retaining the trophy after a 1212 tie. At the end of 2011, Hull was crowned the winner of both the English Girls, and Ladies Order of Merit, the first player to win both in the same year.

In January 2012, Hull returned to Florida where she secured victory at the Harder Hall Invitational, winning with a two-stroke margin over Ariya Jutanugarn. Hull was selected by Great Britain and Ireland for the 2012 Curtis Cup at Nairn Golf Club in Scotland. Speaking about her approach to the sport before the competition, Hull said "I don't set myself goals really. I just go out and play. Just have fun, that's what I say." She lost her fourballs and foursomes matches on the first two days but won her singles match 5 and 3 against Lindy Duncan on the final day, with Great Britain and Ireland defeating the United States 10.5–9.5. Hull had initially been removed from the team in a dispute with the Ladies Golf Union (LGU) over a mandatory training session that conflicted with the Kraft Nabisco Championship, a major championship on the LPGA Tour, to which she had been invited. The LGU re-instated Hull to the team and she finished T38th at the Kraft Nabisco Championship.

Professional career

2013

Hull turned professional on 1 January 2013. She made her professional debut on the Ladies European Tour (LET) in March 2013 at the Lalla Meryem Cup in Agadir, Morocco, where she finished T2nd, three strokes behind Ariya Jutanugarn. She then achieved four further consecutive second-place finishes, culminating at the UniCredit Ladies German Open, where she lost in a playoff to Carlota Ciganda. The tournament had been curtailed to two rounds due to heavy rain. In August 2013, Hull was selected by European Solheim Cup captain Liselotte Neumann to compete in the 2013 Solheim Cup against the United States, with Hull becoming the youngest person ever to play in the tournament. Europe then won in the United States for the first time ever, triumphing 18–10. Hull contributed two points, including a 5 and 4 singles win over Paula Creamer, and finished the event with a 210 record (winlosstie). Neumann later praised Hull's performance, calling her "special" and saying "She plays in a fearless way."

With five additional top-ten finishes on the LET, including T8th in the season-closing Dubai Ladies Masters, Hull finished sixth on the tour's Order of Merit with earnings of just under €135,995 in fifteen official events.{{cite web |last=McRae |first=Donald |title=Charley Hull: 'I'm not going to die if I hit a bad shot, am I?' |url=https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2013/dec/18/charley-hull-rookie-of-the-year-golf |website=The Guardian |access-date=14 May 2025 |date=18 December 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250524010616/https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2013/dec/18/charley-hull-rookie-of-the-year-golf |archive-date=24 May 2025 |url-status=live

2014

On 16 March 2014, four days before her 18th birthday, Hull won her first professional title in Morocco at the Lalla Meryem Cup. She trailed Gwladys Nocera by five strokes with one round remaining, but Hull scored a bogey-free round of nine-under-par to finish level with Nocera and force a playoff. Hull then birdied the first sudden-death hole to secure the victory.{{cite web |title=Charley Hull wins play-off to clinch first Ladies European Tour title |url=https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2014/mar/18/charley-hull-wins-first-ladies-european-tour-title |website=The Guardian |date=18 March 2014 |access-date=17 May 2025 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250521234524/https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2014/mar/18/charley-hull-wins-first-ladies-european-tour-title |archive-date=21 May 2025 |url-status=live

2015

Hull failed to progress through LPGA Qualifying School at the end of 2014, and at the beginning of 2015, she consequently divided her time between playing on the LET and a limited number of events on the LPGA Tour. After her first five tournaments of 2015, Hull reached number 61 on the LPGA money list, and she also entered the top 100 of the LPGA status list which rewarded her with a full exemption to compete whenever she chose to on the LPGA Tour. Hull played in the 2015 Solheim Cup at Golf Club St. Leon-Rot where Europe let slip a 106 lead to lose 13.514.5. She won all four of her pairs matches during the event, but was caught up in controversy in her day two fourballs match partnering Suzann Pettersen. Their match with Alison Lee and Brittany Lincicome was tied going into the 17th hole. Lee missed a putt to win the hole and Hull walked away. Lee picked up her ball, believing the putt had been conceded, but Pettersen said she had not conceded the putt and the United States forfeited the hole. Europe sealed the match at the 18th hole to win 2 up. Hull was emotional afterwards, but Laura Davies, on Sky, felt that she carried no blame for the incident. Hull lost her singles match to Cristie Kerr 3 and 2 on the final day and finished with a 410 record. Hull's best finish of the year on the LPGA Tour came at the Taiwan Championship in October, where she finished fourth. In total, Hull made the cut at 13 tournaments out of 14 on the LPGA Tour in 2015. At the end of the year, Hull's world ranking was 41.

2016

At the 2016 ANA Inspiration, Hull finished runner-up, her best ever major result, one stroke behind Lydia Ko. She competed for England at the International Crown in July, where she helped them finish T3rd. She then competed for Great Britain at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, where she finished in seventh place, two strokes off the bronze medal position.{{cite web |last=Glendenning |first=Barry |title=Charley Hull misses out on bronze while Inbee Park wins golf gold |url=https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/aug/20/charley-hull-inbee-park-womens-golf-rio-olympics |website=The Guardian |access-date=4 May 2025 |date=20 August 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221129071852/ttps://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/aug/20/charley-hull-inbee-park-womens-golf-rio-olympics |archive-date=29 November 2022 |url-status=live

2017

Hull suffered a recurrence of a wrist injury in March and she was unable to record a top-10 finish in a major during 2017. She finished T14th at the ANA Inspiration, missed the cut at the Women's PGA Championship, T21st at the U.S. Women's Open, T16th at the Women's British Open, and finished T32nd at the Evian Championship. In the 2017 Solheim Cup, Europe were defeated 11.516.5 by the United States at the Des Moines Golf and Country Club, Iowa. Hull finished the event with a 111 record, with her win coming against Brittany Lang (1 up) in the singles on the final day. Hull achieved her best finish of the year on the LPGA Tour at the KEB Hana Bank Championship in October, when she finished T6th. At the Dubai Ladies Classic in December, she recorded her best LET finish of the year with a fifth place, three strokes behind Angel Yin.{{cite web |title=Dubai Ladies Classic: Charley Hull fifth as Angel Yin wins three-way play-off |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/golf/42292019 |website=BBC Sport |date=9 December 2017 |access-date=14 May 2025 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250514084232/https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/golf/42292019 |archive-date=14 May 2025 |url-status=live

2018

At the 2018 ANA Inspiration, Hull finished T6th at thirteen-under-par, two shots behind winner Pernilla Lindberg. She finished T10th in the U.S. Women's Open at Shoal Creek, and then secured her third top-10 major finish of 2018 at the Women's PGA Championship, where she finished T6th, four strokes behind Park Sung-hyun at Kemper Lakes. At the International Crown, Hull helped England finish in a tie for second behind South Korea. Her best placed finish of 2018 in a LPGA Tour event came at the KEB Hana Bank Championship in October, where she finished runner-up, three strokes behind Chun In-gee. During the year, Hull made the cut at 22 of the 24 LPGA events that she played, and she ended the year at 24 in the world rankings.

2019

On 12 January 2019, Hull won the Fatima Bint Mubarak Ladies Open at the Saadiyat Beach Golf Club in Abu Dhabi. She finished one stroke ahead of second-placed Marianne Skarpnord to win the LET event. In the 2019 Solheim Cup at Gleneagles Hotel, Scotland, Hull finished unbeaten in all four of her matches to help Europe to a 14.513.5 win over the United States. Hull won two matches in the foursomes partnering Azahara Muñoz, and tied her singles match on the final day with Megan Khang, to finish with a 202 record. On the LPGA Tour, Hull finished a season-best second at the CME Group Tour Championship in November, behind winner Sei Young Kim. Hull finished 2019 at 26 in the world rankings.

2020

Hull at the 2022 [[Dana Open

In June 2020, during a suspension of all the major golf tours due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Hull won the opening event of the Rose Ladies Series in the United Kingdom, and in early August, finished second in the final event to top the series standings ahead of Georgia Hall. After the tours had resumed, she missed the halfway cut at the AIG Women's Open, the first major of the year. In September, she tested positive for COVID-19 during pre-tournament testing for the ANA Inspiration and was forced to withdraw from the year's second major. In October, she finished in a tie for seventh place in the Women's PGA Championship. Hull finished in a tie for sixth at the Saudi Ladies International in November. Her best finish on the LPGA Tour in 2020 came at the Volunteers of America Classic in December, where she finished T6th, four strokes behind Angela Stanford. She finished the year at 34 in the world rankings.

2021

Hull chose not to take part in the Tokyo Summer Olympics, citing scheduling concerns. She finished in a tie for fifth in the Women's Scottish Open at Dumbarnie Links in August, and she was later part of the European team that triumphed 1513 over the United States in the 2021 Solheim Cup at the Inverness Club, Toledo, Ohio. Hull finished 220 from her four matches. She won both of her points for Europe alongside Emily Kristine Pedersen. In the day one foursomes, they beat Lexi Thompson and Brittany Altomare (1 up), and in the day two fourballs, they were victorious over Danielle Kang and Austin Ernst (4 and 2). Hull then secured her third title on the LET at the Aramco team Series-New York event in October. She clinched a one-stroke victory, with Nelly Korda her closest challenger. Hull finished the year with a T15th finish at the Tour Championship and ended at 33 in the world rankings.

2022

Hull finished in a tie for third at the 2022 Evian Championship, two shots behind champion Brooke Henderson.{{cite news |title=Evian Championship: Brooke Henderson snatches dramatic victory and second major title in France |url=https://www.skysports.com/golf/news/12176/12658404/evian-championship-brooke-henderson-snatches-dramatic-victory-and-second-major-title-in-france |work=Sky Sports|date=24 July 2022 |access-date=9 May 2025 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220725053635/https://www.skysports.com/golf/news/12176/12658404/evian-championship-brooke-henderson-snatches-dramatic-victory-and-second-major-title-in-france |archive-date=25 July 2022 |url-status=live

2023

Hull began her year with a T2nd finish at the Tournament of Champions in Orlando, Florida. She finished four strokes behind winner Brooke Henderson. She also finished in a tie for second place at the 2023 U.S. Women's Open at Pebble Beach, three shots behind Allisen Corpuz. In the first round of the Aramco Team Series-London in July, she carded a five-under-par 68, firing ten birdies and a quintuple-bogey 10 on the par-5 sixth hole at the Centurion Club. She finished the tournament in second place at seven-under-par, three shots behind Nelly Korda. In the 2023 Women's British Open at Walton Heath, Hull finished in second place, six shots adrift of winner Lilia Vu, Hull said she felt "deflated" not to win. Hull finished second for the fifth time in 2023 at the Kroger Queen City Championship. She lost a playoff to Minjee Lee in Cincinnati, Ohio. At the 2023 Solheim Cup at Finca Cortesin in Casares, Andalusia, Hull finished with a 120 record as Europe and the United States finished tied 1414, meaning that Europe retained the trophy. Hull was defeated, 4 and 2, by Danielle Kang in singles. She finished the year at number eight in the world rankings.

2024

Hull finished in a tie for second, three strokes behind Alexandra Försterling at the Aramco Team Series-Tampa in March. After Hull then finished tenth at the Fir Hills Seri Pak Championship, former Solheim Cup player Trish Johnson questioned Hull's aggressive approach to the game and said "She doesn't win anywhere near enough for her talent...The thing with Charley is you're never going to change her...She's just going to go for every pin." Hull was later selected by Great Britain for the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris. She endured a 'difficult' first round where she shot a nine-over-par 81, to fall 16 shots off the gold medal position. Hull fought back and eventually finished T27th on one-over-par, eleven strokes behind gold medal winner Lydia Ko. Hull competed for Europe in the 2024 Solheim Cup, which was staged at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club in Gainesville, Virginia. She won three of her five matches, including a 6 and 4 victory against Nelly Korda in the final day singles, but could not prevent the United States securing the overall victory. Hull finished the event with a 320 record.

In November, Hull clinched her first victory since 2022 when she triumphed in the Aramco Team Series event in Riyadh. She won the tournament by three strokes and ended a sequence of finishing runner-up six times without victory. She then finished T2nd at The Annika, three strokes behind Nelly Korda. Hull had taken a one-stroke lead into the final round but shot a one-over-par 71 to slip back. After the tournament, in which Hull finished her round in increasing darkness, Hull was critical of slow play by several of her fellow professionals, and called for punishments, starting at two-shot penalties, up to the loss of Tour Cards for repeat offenders. She ended the year as the world number ten.

2025

In March, at the Women's World Golf Championship in Singapore, Hull held a one-shot lead at the end of the third round. However, a final-round 74 saw her miss out on the title to Lydia Ko, and Hull finished T4th, six shots behind Ko. She finished fourth at the Women's Irish Open in early July,{{cite news |last=Gault |first=Matt |title=English amateur Woad, 21, wins Women's Irish Open |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/golf/articles/c9dg64eey7wo |work=BBC Sport |access-date=25 July 2025 |date=6 July 2025 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250716043121/https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/golf/articles/c9dg64eey7wo |archive-date=16 July 2025 |url-status=live

In September, Hull reached a career high of number five in the world rankings, becoming the first Englishwoman to reach the top-5 since the rankings were introduced in 2006. The following month, she competed for the World team at the 2025 International Crown, and they finished in third position. In November, Hull finished in a share for fourth place at The Annika.

Personal life

Hull was born to Dave, a former plasterer, and Basienka, who is of Polish descent. She has two half-sisters, one from each parent. Hull married Ozzie Smith, a mixed martial arts fighter, in Burton Latimer on 21 September 2019. The couple later divorced in 2021. Hull is best friends with fellow golf professional Georgia Hall, whom she met when they were around 11 years of age.

Hull has a keen interest in fashion, which she displays both on and off the golf course and she has held associations with clothing sponsors such as Anew, and Malbon Golf. She is also a keen gym goer, has called golf-related exercises "boring" and prefers running and weights based exercise.

In July 2023, Hull revealed that she had been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), saying "I find it hard to concentrate but I've found my triggers now" and explained the importance of keeping her mind busy. Hull said in 2024 that she had been diagnosed with degenerative arthritis in her shoulder. She explained that the conditioned worsened in cold weather.

In June 2024, a video of Hull smoking at the U.S. Women's Open went viral online. Speaking about her lifestyle in September 2024 Hull explained "I live my life the way I want to live it, not how anyone else wants me to live it." She has also said "It’s the only bad thing I do!" and has explained that she rarely drinks alcohol and eats healthily.

Hull made a cameo in the 2025 film Happy Gilmore 2.

Hull has publicly spoken out against single-sex golf clubs. When asked by the BBC if she had experienced discrimination on the course, she recounted that when she was seven years old she defeated a 17-year-old boy and he swore at her after the match.

Amateur wins

  • 2008 English Girls under-13 Championship
  • 2010 The Leveret,
  • 2011 Ione D Jones/Doherty Championship, Welsh Women's Open Stroke Play Championship, English Women's Open Amateur Stroke Play Championship
  • 2012 Harder Hall Invitational

Professional wins (8)

LPGA Tour wins (3)

Legend
Major championships (0)
Other LPGA Tour (3)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner-upWinner's
share ($)Ref
120 Nov 2016CME Group Tour Championship67-70-66-66=269−192 strokesKOR Ryu So-yeon500,000
22 Oct 2022Volunteers of America Classic67-64-71-64=266−181 strokeCHN Lin Xiyu255,000
314 Sep 2025Kroger Queen City Championship68-65-67-68=268–201 strokeTHA Atthaya Thitikul300,000

LPGA Tour playoff record (0–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)ResultRef
12023Kroger Queen City ChampionshipAUS Minjee LeeLost to birdie on second extra hole

Ladies European Tour wins (4)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner-upWinner's
share (€)Ref
116 Mar 2014Lalla Meryem Cup68-71-68-62=269−15PlayoffFRA Gwladys Nocera67,500
212 Jan 2019Fatima Bint Mubarak Ladies Open67-72-69=208−81 strokeNOR Marianne Skarpnord38,115
316 Oct 2021Aramco Team Series – New York69-70-65=204−121 strokeUSA Nelly Korda25,864
42 Nov 2024Aramco Team Series – Riyadh65-67-66=198−183 strokesDEN Nicole Broch Estrup69,191

LET playoff record (1–3)

No.YearTournamentOpponentResultRef
12013UniCredit Ladies German OpenESP Carlota CigandaLost to birdie on first extra hole
22014Lalla Meryem CupFRA Gwladys NoceraWon with birdie on first extra hole
32014Ladies German OpenSCO Kylie WalkerLost to par on first extra hole
42022Aramco Team Series - JeddahGER Chiara NojaLost to birdie on second extra hole

Other wins (1)

  • 2020 Rose Ladies Series – Event 1

Results in LPGA majors

Results not in chronological order.

Tournament201220132014201520162017201820192020
Chevron ChampionshipT38T7T26T2T14T6T12
U.S. Women's OpenT42CUTT21T10T16T30
Women's PGA ChampionshipT2616CUTT6CUTT7
The Evian ChampionshipCUTT47T38T52T32T22T30NT
Women's British OpenCUTCUTT12T31T17T16CUTT24CUT
Tournament20212022202320242025
Chevron ChampionshipT14T25CUTT23CUT
U.S. Women's OpenCUTT20T2T19T12
Women's PGA ChampionshipT21CUTCUTT16T12
The Evian ChampionshipT25T3CUTCUTWD
Women's British OpenCUTT222T20T2

CUT = Missed the half-way cut

WD = withdrew

T = tied

NT = no tournament

Summary

TournamentWins2nd3rdTop-5Top-10Top-25EventsCuts madeTotals041510336043
Chevron Championship0101391210
U.S. Women's Open010127119
Women's PGA Championship000026117
The Evian Championship001113128
Women's British Open020228149
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 10 (2014 ANA – 2016 Women's PGA)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 3 (2018 ANA – 2018 Women's PGA)

LPGA Tour career summary

YearTournaments
playedCuts
made*Wins2nds3rdsTop
10sBest
finishEarnings
($)Money
list rankScoring
averageScoring
rankTotals^199 (2015)168 (2015)39342110,902,07428
2012210000T38n/an/a73.33n/a
2013420000T17n/an/a71.83n/a
20141070012T3n/an/a71.68n/a
2015141300034359,9294871.4332
20162219110511,114,3601570.6018
201722180003T6442,9424671.1043
2018242201162869,0121970.2816
2019221701022885,9611971.3958
2020860002T6281,5944071.3631
2021191700025392,3085570.7335
20221813101511,084,9682170.1516
20231814040522,395,650670.3015
202417150105T21,104,0002870.5314
20251514110411,971,350969.939

^ official as of 2025 season

  • Includes matchplay and other tournaments without a cut.

World ranking

Position in Women's World Golf Rankings at the end of each calendar year.

YearRankingSource
2012352
201399
201438
201541url=http://www.rolexrankings.com/en/rankings/2015-12-28title=Women's World Golf Rankingspublisher=Rolex Rankingsdate=December 28, 2015access-date=15 August 2022archive-date=31 December 2015archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151231032204/http://www.rolexrankings.com/en/rankings/2015-12-28url-status=live}}
201616url=http://www.rolexrankings.com/en/rankings/2016-12-26title=Women's World Golf Rankingspublisher=Rolex Rankingsdate=December 26, 2016access-date=15 August 2022archive-date=28 December 2016archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161228124638/http://www.rolexrankings.com/en/rankings/2016-12-26url-status=live}}
201728url=http://www.rolexrankings.com/en/rankings/2017-12-25title=Women's World Golf Rankingsdate=December 25, 2017access-date=15 August 2022publisher=Rolex Rankingsarchive-date=26 December 2017archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171226131333/http://www.rolexrankings.com/en/rankings/2017-12-25url-status=live}}
201824url=https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2018-12-31title=Women's World Golf Rankingsdate=December 31, 2018access-date=15 August 2022publisher=Rolex Rankingsarchive-date=31 December 2018archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181231194331/https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2018-12-31url-status=live}}
201926url=https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2019-12-30title=Women's World Golf Rankingspublisher=Rolex Rankingsdate=December 30, 2019access-date=15 August 2022archive-date=2 January 2020archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200102041724/https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2019-12-30url-status=live}}
202034url=https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2020-12-28title=Women's World Golf Rankingspublisher=Rolex Rankingsdate=December 28, 2020access-date=15 August 2022archive-date=17 May 2021archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210517025839/https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2020-12-28url-status=live}}
202133url=https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2021-12-27title=Women's World Golf Rankingspublisher=Rolex Rankingsdate=December 27, 2021access-date=15 August 2022archive-date=29 December 2021archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211229161435/https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2021-12-27url-status=live}}
202217url=https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2022-12-26title=Women's World Golf Rankingspublisher=Rolex Rankingsdate=December 26, 2022access-date=26 December 2022archive-date=26 December 2022archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221226181301/https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2022-12-26url-status=live}}
20238url=https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2023-12-25title=Women's World Golf Rankingspublisher=Rolex Rankingsdate=December 25, 2023access-date=2 January 2024archive-date=2 January 2024archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240102190551/https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2023-12-25url-status=live}}
202410url=https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2024-12-30title=Women's World Golf Rankingspublisher=Rolex Rankingsdate=December 30, 2024access-date=1 January 2025archive-date=2 January 2025archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250102052643/https://www.rolexrankings.com/rankings/2024-12-30url-status=live}}
20255

Team appearances

Amateur

  • European Ladies' Team Championship (representing England): 2011
  • Junior Vagliano Trophy: (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 2011
  • Junior Solheim Cup (representing Europe): 2011
  • European Girls' Team Championship (representing the England): 2012
  • Curtis Cup (representing Great Britain & Ireland): 2012 (winners)
  • Espirito Santo Trophy (representing England): 2012

Professional

  • Solheim Cup (representing Europe): 2013 (winners), 2024
  • International Crown (representing England): 2016, 2018, (representing World team): 2025

Solheim Cup record

YearTotal
matchesTotal
W–L–HSingles
W–L–HFoursomes
W–L–HFourballs
W–L–HPoints
wonPoints
%
Career27*15–9–3**3–3–1**6–3–1**6–3–1*16.561.1
20133*2–1–0**1–0–0* def. P. Creamer 5&4*0–0–0**1–1–0* lost w/ C. Matthew 2&1
won w/ J. Ewart Shadoff 2 up266.7
20155*4–1–0**0–1–0* lost to C. Kerr 3&2*2–0–0* won w/ M. Reid 2&1
won w/ S. Pettersen 1 up*2–0–0* won w/ G. Nocera 3&2
won w/ S. Pettersen 2 up480.0
20173*1–1–1**1–0–0* def. B.Lang 1 up*0–0–1* halved w/ M. Reid*0–1–0* lost w/ G.Hall 2&11.550.0
20194*2–0–2**0–0–1* halved w/ M. Khang*2–0–0* won w/ A. Muñoz 2&1
won w/ A. Muñoz 4&3*0–0–1* halved w/ A. Muñoz375.0
20214*2–2–0**0–1–0* lost to J. Korda 3&1*1–1–0* won w/ E. Pedersen 1 up
lost w/ E. Pedersen 2&1*1–0–0* won w/ E. Pedersen 3&2250.0
20233*1–2–0**0–1–0* lost to D. Kang 4&2*0–1–0* lost w/ E. Pedersen 5&4*1–0–0* won w/ L. Maguire 4&3133.3
20245*3–2–0**1–0-0* def. N. Korda 6&4*1–1–0* lost w/ E. Henseleit 3&2
won w/ E. Henseleit 1 up*1–1–0* lost w/ L. Grant 5&4
won w/ G. Hall 2 up360.0

References

References

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