Nelly Korda Chases Golf History at the KPMG Women's PGA Championship
The world of women's golf is holding its collective breath this week as Nelly Korda steps onto the course at the KPMG Women's PGA Championship with a singular, stunning mission: win her third consecutive major championship. If she succeeds, Korda will carve her name into the record books in a way that very few players in the history of the sport — men's or women's — have ever managed. This is not just a tournament. This is a date with destiny.
For casual fans and hardcore golf enthusiasts alike, the KPMG Women's PGA Championship has become must-watch television, and the reason is walking the fairways with a calm, focused intensity that has come to define one of the most dominant stretches of play the LPGA Tour has ever witnessed.
Understanding the Magnitude of What Korda Is Attempting
To fully appreciate what Nelly Korda is chasing, it helps to put the accomplishment in its proper historical context. Winning back-to-back major championships in professional golf is extraordinarily rare. Winning three in a row is something that exists almost entirely in the realm of legend. On the women's side of the game, no player in the modern era has managed to string together three consecutive major victories, making Korda's pursuit not just impressive but genuinely unprecedented.
Korda's recent dominance has been the talk of the sport. Her ability to combine elite ball-striking with a steady short game and an unflappable competitive temperament has set her apart from the field in a way that few players have managed at any point in LPGA Tour history. When Nelly Korda shows up to a major championship, the rest of the field knows they are fighting for second place — and even that fight is an uphill battle.
Korda's Path to Back-to-Back Majors
Nelly Korda's rise to the top of women's golf has been one of the most compelling stories in the sport over recent years. The 26-year-old American, born into a family of elite athletes — her father Petr Korda is a former Grand Slam tennis champion and her sister Jessica is also an LPGA Tour professional — seemed destined for greatness from an early age. But destiny still requires work, and Korda has put in the time.
Her back-to-back major victories heading into the KPMG demonstrated a player who has found a level of consistency and confidence that is difficult to shake. Whether it is navigating a tight leaderboard on Sunday afternoon or managing a golf course that demands precision from tee to green, Korda has shown the full toolkit of a champion. Her composure under pressure in particular has drawn comparisons to the greats of the women's game.
What Makes the KPMG Women's PGA Championship So Significant
The KPMG Women's PGA Championship holds a special place in the LPGA Tour's major calendar. As one of the five women's major championships, it carries enormous prestige, and the field it attracts each year is as deep and competitive as anywhere in professional golf. Past champions of the event include legends of the sport, and a victory here — especially under the circumstances Korda finds herself in — would be one for the ages.
The championship setting also tends to bring out the very best in the world's top players, which means Korda will face fierce competition from a host of elite international talent. Players from South Korea, Australia, Thailand, and Europe consistently challenge at major level, and they will all arrive at the KPMG with the same awareness of the historic opportunity in front of them — not just for Korda, but for whoever might be the one to stop her.
The Competition Standing Between Korda and History
While Korda is the undisputed favorite and the story of the week, the LPGA Tour is not short of players capable of rising to a major moment. Among those expected to challenge are:
- Lydia Ko — The New Zealand veteran and Olympic champion brings a wealth of major championship experience and possesses one of the most consistent ball-striking games on tour.
- Celine Boutier — The French star has been one of the most consistent performers on the LPGA Tour and has the game to contend deep into a major weekend.
- Brooke Henderson — Canada's all-time LPGA wins leader is always dangerous at major championships and thrives when the spotlight burns brightest.
- Haeji Kang and the deep South Korean contingent — South Korean players have historically dominated women's major championships, and this week will be no different in terms of their collective threat.
Any one of these players could produce a performance worthy of a major title. But stopping Nelly Korda in this form would require something truly special.
Can Korda Make History?
The question on every golf fan's lips is a simple one: can she do it? Based on everything we have seen from Nelly Korda over the past year, the answer has to be a cautious but genuine yes. She arrives at the KPMG Women's PGA Championship not as someone chasing form or trying to rediscover her best golf, but as the world number one playing with freedom, confidence, and the kind of momentum that is almost impossible to manufacture.
History is rarely made easily, and the KPMG field will test Korda in every conceivable way across four demanding rounds of championship golf. But if there is one player on the planet capable of achieving something no modern women's golfer has done before, it is the player currently standing at the top of the world rankings with two consecutive majors already in her trophy case.
Whether she ultimately lifts the trophy or not, Nelly Korda's pursuit of a third consecutive major at the KPMG Women's PGA Championship is the most compelling storyline in women's golf right now — and one of the great individual quests in the sport today. Tee times cannot come soon enough.

