Nelly Korda Eyes Historic Third Consecutive Major at the KPMG Women's PGA Championship
Women's golf is no stranger to moments of brilliance, but what Nelly Korda is chasing this week at the KPMG Women's PGA Championship belongs in a category all its own. The world's top-ranked women's golfer is stepping onto the course with a chance to win her third straight major championship — a feat so rare in modern professional golf that it would immediately cement her legacy as one of the greatest players of her generation, if not the greatest of her era.
The KPMG Women's PGA Championship is one of the five major championships on the LPGA Tour calendar, and it consistently draws the world's best players, fierce competition, and enormous media attention. This year, however, all eyes are fixed squarely on one name: Nelly Korda.
A Streak That Has Captivated the Golf World
To fully appreciate what Korda is attempting, it helps to look back at the streak she has built. Over the past two major championships, the 26-year-old Florida native has demonstrated a level of clutch performance and ball-striking consistency that has left both fans and fellow competitors in awe. Each victory was not merely a win — it was a statement. Korda has repeatedly shown an uncanny ability to raise her game when the stakes are highest, combining powerful driving, a precise iron game, and a calm putting stroke that rarely abandons her under pressure.
Winning back-to-back majors in women's golf is an achievement unto itself. Winning three in a row would place Korda alongside the rarest company in the sport's history. For context, consecutive major victories at the elite women's level are extraordinarily difficult to achieve given the depth of the modern LPGA Tour, where players from South Korea, Japan, Europe, and the United States are all capable of winning on any given week.
What Makes Korda So Dominant Right Now?
There are several key factors that have driven Korda's remarkable run of form, and understanding them helps explain why she enters the KPMG as the clear favorite.
- Ball-striking excellence: Korda consistently ranks among the tour leaders in greens in regulation and driving distance, giving her a significant statistical edge over most of the field. Her ability to set up birdie opportunities on a regular basis keeps scorecards moving in the right direction.
- Mental resilience: Perhaps no attribute is more valuable in major championship golf than the ability to stay composed when things get difficult. Korda has demonstrated an impressive emotional steadiness, rarely allowing bogeys to cascade into bigger numbers or early-round struggles to derail an entire week.
- Experience at the top: Korda has spent considerable time as the world's number-one ranked women's golfer, and that experience of playing with a target on her back has only made her stronger. She understands the unique pressures that come with being the favorite and has learned to channel that energy productively.
- A well-rounded team: Behind every great player is a support structure that keeps training sharp and strategy well-calibrated. Korda's team has done an exceptional job of keeping her physically healthy, mentally fresh, and technically sound across the rigors of a long professional season.
The Field She Will Have to Beat
While Korda is undeniably the story of the week, the KPMG Women's PGA Championship will feature an elite field that will not simply hand her a third trophy. The depth of the modern LPGA Tour means that any given week can produce a surprise champion, and major championships in particular have a way of bringing out the best in the entire field.
Players like Lydia Ko, Brooke Henderson, Céline Boutier, and a host of elite South Korean stars will all be in contention. Younger players who have been steadily climbing the world rankings will also see this as a golden opportunity to announce themselves on the biggest stage. In major championship golf, motivation is rarely in short supply, and when a dominant player is chasing history, it has a way of elevating the competitive intensity of the entire field.
The course setup will also play a significant role. Major championships typically feature tighter rough, faster greens, and more demanding pin positions — conditions designed to test every dimension of a player's game. Korda's well-rounded skill set suits these conditions well, but executing under that kind of pressure, week after week, is the ultimate test.
What a Third Consecutive Major Would Mean for Women's Golf
Beyond the personal achievement, Korda winning a third straight major would have a meaningful impact on the broader landscape of women's golf. Moments of sustained dominance generate mainstream attention, attract new fans to the sport, and inspire the next generation of young players to pick up a club and dream big.
Women's golf has been growing steadily in global popularity, with increased television coverage, rising prize funds, and a broader social media presence bringing the sport to new audiences. A historic performance from its most recognizable star would only accelerate that momentum.
History Is Within Reach
Golf history is written one shot at a time, one round at a time, one tournament at a time. Nelly Korda has already done enough in her career to secure a place among the sport's greats — but the opportunity in front of her this week at the KPMG Women's PGA Championship is something genuinely extraordinary.
Three consecutive major championships would not simply be a personal milestone. It would be one of the defining storylines in the history of women's professional golf. Korda has the game, the experience, the composure, and the momentum to make it happen. All that remains is to go out and do it, one swing at a time.
The world will be watching — and if the last two majors are any indication, Nelly Korda is more than ready for the moment.

