2019 in golf
This article summarizes the highlights of professional and amateur golf in the year 2019.
Men's professional golf
major golf championships|Major championships]]
- 11–14 April: Masters Tournament – Tiger Woods won by one stroke over Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, and Xander Schauffele. It was his fifth Masters championship, his 15th major championship, and his 81st PGA Tour win.
- 16–19 May: PGA Championship – Brooks Koepka won by two strokes over Dustin Johnson for his second consecutive PGA Championship victory. He is the first player to simultaneously hold the last two titles of two different major championships.
- 13–16 June: U.S. Open – Gary Woodland won by three strokes over two-time defending champion Koepka. It was his first major victory.
- 18–21 July: The Open Championship – Shane Lowry won by six strokes over Tommy Fleetwood for his first major championship.
[World Golf Championships]
- 21–24 February: WGC-Mexico Championship – Dustin Johnson won by five strokes over Rory McIlroy. It was his third WGC-Mexico Championship win and sixth WGC tournament win.
- 27–31 March: WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play – Kevin Kisner defeated Matt Kuchar, 3 & 2, in the championship match. It was his first WGC victory.
- 25–28 July: WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational – Brooks Koepka won by three strokes over Webb Simpson. It was his first WGC victory.
- 31 October – 3 November: WGC-HSBC Champions – Rory McIlroy won in a playoff over defending champion Xander Schauffele. McIlroy has now won three of the four WGC events.
[FedEx Cup] playoff events
- 8–11 August: The Northern Trust – Patrick Reed won by one stroke over Abraham Ancer and moved to second in the FedEx Cup rankings.
- 15–18 August: BMW Championship – Justin Thomas won by three strokes over Patrick Cantlay. His third round 61 set the course record. His win moved him top the top of the FedEx Cup rankings.
- 22–25 August: Tour Championship – Rory McIlroy won by four strokes over Xander Schauffele. McIlroy became the second two–time winner of the FedEx Cup.
Other leading PGA Tour events
- 14–17 March: The Players Championship – Rory McIlroy won by one stroke over Jim Furyk. He became the first golfer to win both the BMW PGA Championship and the Players Championship.
Leading European Tour events
- 19–22 September: BMW PGA Championship – Danny Willett won by three strokes over Jon Rahm.
- 21–24 November: DP World Tour Championship, Dubai – Jon Rahm won by one stroke over Tommy Fleetwood, also winning the Race to Dubai.
Team events
- 12–15 December: Presidents Cup – The U.S. team won, 16–14, for the eighth straight time.
Tour leaders
- PGA Tour – Brooks Koepka
- * This total does not include FedEx Cup bonuses.
- European Tour – Jon Rahm
- Japan Golf Tour – Shugo Imahira
- Asian Tour – Jazz Janewattananond
- PGA Tour of Australasia – Ryan Fox
- Sunshine Tour –
Awards
- PGA Tour
- *FedEx Cup – Rory McIlroy
- *PGA Player of the Year – Brooks Koepka
- *Player of the Year – Rory McIlroy
- *Leading money winner – Brooks Koepka
- *Vardon Trophy – Rory McIlroy
- *Byron Nelson Award – Rory McIlroy
- *Rookie of the Year – Im Sung-jae
- *Payne Stewart Award – Hale Irwin
- European Tour
- *Golfer of the Year – Jon Rahm
- *Rookie of the Year – Robert MacIntyre
- Korn Ferry Tour
- *Player of the Year – Scottie Scheffler
Results from other tours
- 2019 Asian Tour
- 2019 PGA Tour of Australasia
- 2019 PGA Tour Canada
- 2019 Challenge Tour
- 2019 Japan Golf Tour
- 2019 PGA Tour Latinoamérica
- 2019–20 Sunshine Tour
- 2019 Korn Ferry Tour
Other happenings
- 6 January: Three tours were added to the Official World Golf Ranking: All Thailand Golf Tour, Professional Golf Tour of India, and Abema TV Tour.
- 6 January: Justin Rose regains the world number one ranking from Brooks Koepka.
- 28 January: It was announced that the 2019 Players Championship would include a $12.5 million purse, "the biggest prize professional golf has ever seen for a single tournament."
- 3 March: Dustin Johnson regains the world number one ranking from Justin Rose, one week after winning the WGC-Mexico Championship.
- 7 April: Rose regains the world number one ranking from Johnson.
- 14 April: Johnson returns to the number one ranking after finishing second at the Masters.
- 19 May: Brooks Koepka returns to the world number one ranking after winning the PGA Championship.
- 13 September: Kevin Chappell shot a 59 in the second round of A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier. It was the 11th round under 60 in PGA Tour history.
- 28 October: Tiger Woods wins the Zozo Championship to tied Sam Snead for most wins on the PGA Tour with 82.
Women's professional golf
LPGA majors
- 4–7 April: ANA Inspiration – Ko Jin-young won her first major by three strokes over Lee Mi-hyang.
- 30 May – 2 June: U.S. Women's Open – Lee Jeong-eun won her first major title by two strokes over a group of three players.
- 20–23 June: KPMG Women's PGA Championship – Australian Hannah Green won her first major by one stroke over defending champion Park Sung-hyun. It was the first wire-to-wire win at the Women's PGA Championship since Yani Tseng in 2011 and the first major win by an Australian since Karrie Webb at the 2006 Kraft Nabisco Championship.
- 25–28 July: The Evian Championship – Ko Jin-young won by two strokes over Shanshan Feng, Kim Hyo-joo, and Jennifer Kupcho. It was her second major championship of the year.
- 1–4 August: Women's British Open – Hinako Shibuno, of Japan, playing for the first time outside of her home country and in her first major, won by one stroke over American Lizette Salas.
Additional LPGA Tour events
- 21–24 November: CME Group Tour Championship – Kim Sei-young won by one stroke over Charley Hull.
For a complete list of Ladies European Tour results see 2019 Ladies European Tour.
Team events
- 13–15 September: Solheim Cup – Team Europe won the Cup with a 14½–13½ victory over Team USA.
Money list leaders
- LPGA Tour – Ko Jin-young
- LPGA of Japan Tour – Ai Suzuki
- Ladies European Tour – Esther Henseleit
- LPGA of Korea Tour – Choi Hye-jin
- ALPG Tour – Sarah Kemp
- Symetra Tour – Perrine Delacour
Other tour results
- 2019 ALPG Tour
- 2019 LPGA of Japan Tour
- 2019 LPGA of Korea Tour
- 2019 Symetra Tour
Other happenings
- 4 March: Park Sung-hyun regains the world number one ranking from Ariya Jutanugarn after winning the HSBC Women's World Championship.
- 8 April: Ko Jin-young takes the world number one ranking after winning the ANA Inspiration.
- 1 July: Park regains the world number one ranking from Ko after winning the Walmart NW Arkansas Championship.
- 29 July: Ko Jin-young regains the world number one ranking after winning the Evian Championship.
Senior men's professional golf
Senior majors
- 9–12 May: Regions Tradition – Steve Stricker won by six strokes over Billy Andrade, Paul Goydos, and David Toms. It is his first major championship.
- 23–26 May: Senior PGA Championship – Ken Tanigawa won his first major by one stroke over Scott McCarron.
- 27–30 June: U.S. Senior Open – Steve Stricker, playing in his first U.S. Senior Open, won by six strokes over Jerry Kelly and David Toms. It is his second major championship.
- 11–14 July: Senior Players Championship – Retief Goosen won his first senior major by two strokes over Jay Haas and Tim Petrovic.
- 25–28 July: Senior Open Championship – Bernhard Langer won by two strokes over Paul Broadhurst. It was his fourth Senior Open championship, his 11th senior major championship, and his 40th PGA Tour Champions win.
Charles Schwab Cup playoff events
- 18–20 October: Dominion Charity Classic – Miguel Ángel Jiménez won by two strokes over Tommy Tolles.
- 1–3 November: Invesco QQQ Championship – Colin Montgomerie won in a playoff over Bernhard Langer.
- 7–10 November: Charles Schwab Cup Championship – Jeff Maggert won in a playoff over Retief Goosen.
Full results
- 2019 PGA Tour Champions season
- 2019 European Senior Tour
Money list leaders
- PGA Tour Champions – Scott McCarron
- European Senior Tour – Phillip Price
Awards
- PGA Tour Champions
- *Charles Schwab Cup – Scott McCarron
- *Player of the Year – Scott McCarron
- *Rookie of the Year – Retief Goosen
- *Leading money winner – Scott McCarron
- *Lowest stroke average – Retief Goosen
Senior women's professional golf
- 16–19 May: U.S. Senior Women's Open – Helen Alfredsson won her first senior major by two strokes over Juli Inkster and Trish Johnson.
- 14–16 October: Senior LPGA Championship – Helen Alfredsson won by three strokes over Juli Inkster, completing the second straight senior women's Grand Slam after Laura Davies' inaugural in 2018.
Amateur golf
- 17–20 January: Latin America Amateur Championship – Álvaro Ortiz won by two strokes over Luis Gagne. Ortiz had finished runner-up in the previous two Latin America Amateurs.
- 3–6 April: Augusta National Women's Amateur – Jennifer Kupcho won the inaugural event.
- 17–22 May: NCAA Division I Women's Golf Championships – María Fassi took the individual title and Duke captured their seventh team title.
- 24–29 May: NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championships – Matthew Wolff won the individual title and Stanford won its 9th team title.
- 11–15 June: The Womens Amateur Championship – Emily Toy defeated Amelia Garvey, 1 up in the final.
- 17–22 June: The Amateur Championship – James Sugrue defeated Euan Walker, 2 up, in the final.
- 26–29 June: European Amateur – Matthias Schmid wins by three strokes over Euan Walker.
- 24–27 July: European Ladies Amateur Championship – Alice Hewson won in a playoff over Krista Junkkari.
- 5–11 August: U.S. Women's Amateur – Gabriela Ruffels became the first Australian to win the U.S. Women's Amateur with a 1 up victory over Albane Valenzuela.
- 12–18 August: U.S. Amateur – Andy Ogletree defeated John Augenstein, 2 and 1, in the final.
- 7–8 September: Walker Cup – The United States team won, 15½–10½.
- 26–29 September: Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship – Lin Yuxin of China won his second Asia-Pacific Amateur.
Golf in multi-sport events
- 10–13 July: Pacific Games – New Caledonia swept the gold medals: men's individual, women's individual, men's team and women's team.
- 8–11 August: Pan American Games – Fabrizio Zanotti of Paraguay took the men's gold medal in a playoff, American amateur Emilia Migliaccio took the women's gold medal and the American team took the mixed team gold medal.
- 2–6 December: South Asian Games – Nepal took the men's individual and team gold medals while Sri Lanka took the women's individual and team gold medals.
- 4–7 December: Southeast Asian Games – James Leow Kwang Aik of Singapore took the men's individual gold medal while Thailand won men's team gold. The Philippines took the women's gold medals with Bianca Pagdanganan taking the individual title.
Deaths
- 1 February – Alice Dye, American amateur golfer and golf course designer.
- 15 February – Gene Littler, American professional golfer, U.S. Open winner, member World Golf Hall of Fame.
- 7 March – Dan Jenkins, American author and sportswriter and member of the World Golf Hall of Fame.
- 7 April – Arie Irawan, Malaysian professional golfer who died during a PGA Tour China event.
- 9 April – Marilynn Smith, American professional golfer, co-founder of LPGA, member of World Golf Hall of Fame.
- 3 June – Larry Beck, American professional golfer, winner of the 1957 U.S. Junior Amateur.
- 5 June – Peter Toogood, Australian amateur golfer, 1954 Australian Amateur winner.
- 15 July – Margaret Todd, Canadian amateur golfer and member of the Canadian Golf Hall of Fame.
- 29 July – Mário Gonzalez, Brazilian professional golfer who won the Brazil Open a record eight times.
- 1 August – Gordon Brand Jnr, Scottish golfer who won eight times on the European Tour.
- 9 September – Brian Barnes, Scottish professional golfer who won nine times on the European Tour.
- 6 November – Pat O'Sullivan, American amateur golfer and winner of the 1951 Titleholders Championship.
- 6 December – Jo Ann Washam, American professional golfer who won three times on the LPGA Tour.
- 31 December – Ernie Jones, Irish professional golfer.
- 31 December – J. L. Lewis, American professional golfer who won twice on the PGA Tour.
Table of results
Dates | Tournament | Status or tour | Winner |
17–20 Jan | Latin America Amateur Championship | Amateur men's individual tournament | Álvaro Ortiz |
21–24 Feb | WGC-Mexico Championship | World Golf Championships | Dustin Johnson |
14–17 Mar | The Players Championship | PGA Tour | Rory McIlroy |
27–31 Mar | WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play | World Golf Championships | Kevin Kisner |
3–6 Apr | Augusta National Women's Amateur | Amateur women's individual tournament | Jennifer Kupcho |
4–7 Apr | ANA Inspiration | LPGA major | Ko Jin-young |
11–14 Apr | Masters Tournament | Men's major | Tiger Woods |
9–12 May | Regions Tradition | Senior major | Steve Stricker |
16–19 May | PGA Championship | Men's major | Brooks Koepka |
17–22 May | NCAA Division I Women's Golf Championships | U.S. college championship | Duke / María Fassi |
23–26 May | Senior PGA Championship | Senior major | Ken Tanigawa |
24–29 May | NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championships | U.S. college championship | Stanford / Matthew Wolff |
30 May – 2 Jun | U.S. Women's Open | LPGA major | Lee Jeong-eun |
11–15 Jun | The Womens Amateur Championship | Amateur women's individual tournament | Emily Toy |
13–16 Jun | U.S. Open | Men's major | Gary Woodland |
17–22 Jun | The Amateur Championship | Amateur men's individual tournament | James Sugrue |
20–23 Jun | KPMG Women's PGA Championship | LPGA major | Hannah Green |
26–29 Jun | European Amateur | Amateur men's individual tournament | Matthias Schmid |
27–30 Jun | U.S. Senior Open | Senior major | Steve Stricker |
11–14 Jul | Bridgestone Senior Players Championship | Senior major | Retief Goosen |
18–21 Jul | The Open Championship | Men's major | Shane Lowry |
24–27 Jul | European Ladies Amateur Championship | Amateur women's individual tournament | Alice Hewson |
25–28 Jul | WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational | World Golf Championships | Brooks Koepka |
25–28 Jul | The Evian Championship | LPGA Tour and Ladies European Tour major | Ko Jin-young |
25–28 Jul | The Senior Open Championship | Senior major | Bernhard Langer |
1–4 Aug | AIG Women's British Open | LPGA Tour and Ladies European Tour major | Hinako Shibuno |
5–11 Aug | U.S. Women's Amateur | Amateur women's individual tournament | Gabriela Ruffels |
8–11 Aug | The Northern Trust | PGA Tour FedEx Cup playoff | Patrick Reed |
12–18 Aug | U.S. Amateur | Amateur men's individual tournament | Andy Ogletree |
15–18 Aug | BMW Championship | PGA Tour FedEx Cup playoff | Justin Thomas |
22–25 Aug | The Tour Championship | PGA Tour FedEx Cup playoff | Rory McIlroy |
7–8 Sep | Walker Cup | Great Britain & Ireland v United States men's amateur team event | |
13–15 Sep | Solheim Cup | Europe v United States women's professional team event | Team Europe |
19–22 Sep | BMW PGA Championship | European Tour | Danny Willett |
26–29 Sep | Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship | Amateur men's individual tournament | Lin Yuxin |
18–20 Oct | Dominion Charity Classic | PGA Tour Champions Charles Schwab Cup playoff | Miguel Ángel Jiménez |
31 Oct – 3 Nov | WGC-HSBC Champions | World Golf Championships | Rory McIlroy |
1–3 Nov | Invesco QQQ Championship | PGA Tour Champions Charles Schwab Cup playoff | Colin Montgomerie |
7–10 Nov | Charles Schwab Cup Championship | PGA Tour Champions Charles Schwab Cup playoff | Jeff Maggert |
21–24 Nov | DP World Tour Championship, Dubai | European Tour | Jon Rahm |
21–24 Nov | CME Group Tour Championship | LPGA Tour | Kim Sei-young |
12–15 Dec | Presidents Cup | International team vs. United States team men's professional team event | U.S. team |