Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/amateur-golf

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

World Amateur Golf Ranking

none


none

The World Amateur Golf Ranking for men was introduced by The R&A, the governing body of the sport of golf outside the United States and Mexico, on 23 January 2007. It is based on the results of over 2,600 amateur tournaments per year (and amateurs participating in certain professional events) and is updated each Wednesday. Rankings are based on the players' average performances in counting events over a rolling period. This period was 52 weeks initially but was gradually expanded during 2016 to 104 weeks, similar to those of the Official World Golf Ranking.

Like the Official World Golf Ranking for male professional golfers, the amateur ranking was initiated by The R&A to provide a more reliable means of selecting an appropriate field for one of its tournaments. The professional ranking was initially used to help set the field for The Open Championship and the amateur ranking plays a role in selecting the field for The Amateur Championship, which was previously selected mainly on the basis of national handicap systems. Other tournament organisers will be able to use the rankings to select players if they so wish.

The first set of rankings featured over 1,000 players from 46 countries and was headed by the 2006 U.S. Amateur champion, Richie Ramsay of Scotland.

In February 2011, the United States Golf Association (USGA) endorsed the rankings and announced it would use them for an exemption category in all their men's amateur championships, including the U.S. Amateur, beginning in 2011.

The women's rankings were started in February 2011. Japan's Mitsuki Katahira was the first number one. American Rose Zhang holds the record for most weeks at the top of the rankings with 142 weeks.

Only three male and two female golfers have ever held the No. 1-ranking as both an amateur and a professional. The first to do so was Rory McIlroy, who was when he became the No. 1 amateur and when he first became the world No. 1 professional. Jordan Spieth was the second to accomplish this feat, he was when he topped the amateur rankings and when he reached No. 1 in the Official World Golf Ranking. Jon Rahm, who was ranked no. 1 for 60 weeks, became professional world no. 1 in July 2020. Lydia Ko was the first player to accomplish this feat in the female ranking. She was only and held the ranking for a record 130 consecutive weeks, and she was a mere when she first reached the pinnacle of the Women's World Golf Rankings (WWGR). Atthaya Thitikul held the amateur No. 1 for 12 weeks in 2019–2020 and topped the WWGR on 31 October 2022.

Chronology of men's world number ones

#PlayerCountryFirst weekLast weekWeeksTotal weeks
22
11
17
1
(2)118
(2)78
3
55
(2)22
1212
(3)5
11
(4)636
3434
55
22
2020
88
1818
7
2
(2)3
(2)35
(3)19
22
(4)10
1
(5)1049
(2)5455
55
1
11
(2)4546
11
{{sortnamePanCheng-tsungPan, Cheng-tsung}}8
9
66
(2)1221
1616
4141
25
5
(2)3560
(2)37
1
(3)1
(2)34
(4)447
4848
2
33
55
(2)1618
2626
1010
9
1
(2)312
(2)5455
55
1
11
13
(2)78
11
(2)7487^
1
55
(2)15
2
(3)3
(2)2
(4)1029
(3)14
2
(4)1
(2)2
(5)2
(3)4
(6)7
22
(4)1
(7)2
(5)7
(8)1
(6)622
(9)1041
4343
3434

;Key

Chronology of women's world number ones

#PlayerCountryFirst weekLast weekWeeksTotal weeks
3
11
(2)69
130130
1
4
(2)12
(2)1216
2828
15
1515
5
52
1212
(2)83135
18
3
(2)1
(2)12
(3)1231
(3)1934
(2)1
1
(3)1
1
(2)67
(4)1017
(2)1112
3434
22
142142^
5353
5
22
(2)5257
2727

;Key

Elite events

Prior to 2020, events were ranked in eight categories: Elite, A, B, C, D, E, F or G. The Elite events are listed below. The calculation of the ranking changed in 2020 and there are no longer any categories.

Men

  • The Amateur Championship
  • European Amateur
  • U.S. Amateur
  • Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship
  • Eisenhower Trophy
  • NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championships (beginning in 2016)

Women

  • The Women's Amateur Championship
  • European Ladies Amateur Championship
  • U.S. Women's Amateur
  • NCAA Division I Women's Golf Championships
  • Women's Amateur Asia-Pacific (beginning in 2018)
  • Espirito Santo Trophy

References

References

  1. "Notice Regarding 2016 Amendments". WAGR.
  2. (5 February 2011). "The R&A, USGA Commence World Amateur Golf Ranking Partnership". USGA.
  3. (31 January 2011). "The R&A to launch Women's World Amateur Golf Ranking". [[The R&A]].
  4. (16 February 2011). "Harvey breaks Law, while Boineau wins at home". [[The R&A]].
  5. "Power Method FAQs – Will there still be Elite events?". WAGR.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about World Amateur Golf Ranking — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report