Women's Major Golf Championships - Consecutive Victories at A Major Championship

Consecutive Victories At A Major Championship

Nationality Player Major # Years
United States Patty Berg Titleholders Championship 3 1937, 1938, 1939
Sweden Annika Sörenstam LPGA Championship 3 2003, 2004, 2005
United States Opal Hill Women's Western Open 2 1935, 1936
United States Dorothy Kirby Titleholders Championship 2 1941, 1942
United States Babe Zaharias Women's Western Open 2 1944, 1945
United States Louise Suggs Women's Western Open 2 1946, 1947
United States Patty Berg Women's Western Open 2 1957, 1958
United States Mickey Wright U.S. Women's Open 2 1958, 1959
United States Mickey Wright LPGA Championship 2 1960, 1961
United States Mickey Wright Titleholders Championship 2 1961, 1962
United States Mickey Wright Women's Western Open 2 1962, 1963
United States Marilynn Smith Titleholders Championship 2 1963, 1964
United States Kathy Whitworth Titleholders Championship 2 1965, 1966
United States Donna Caponi U.S. Women's Open 2 1969, 1970
United States Susie Berning U.S. Women's Open 2 1972, 1973
United States Hollis Stacy U.S. Women's Open 2 1977, 1978
United States Patty Sheehan LPGA Championship 2 1983, 1984
United States Pat Bradley du Maurier Classic 2 1985, 1986
United States Betsy King U.S. Women's Open 2 1989, 1990
Sweden Annika Sörenstam U.S. Women's Open 2 1995, 1996
United States Juli Inkster LPGA Championship 2 1999, 2000
Australia Karrie Webb U.S. Women's Open 2 2000, 2001
Sweden Annika Sörenstam Kraft Nabisco Championship 2 2001, 2002
Taiwan Yani Tseng Women's British Open 2 2010, 2011

Read more about this topic:  Women's Major Golf Championships

Famous quotes containing the words victories and/or major:

    And, “Better defeat almost,
    If seen clear,
    Than life’s victories of doubt
    That need endless talk-talk
    To make them out.”
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)

    All of the great leaders have had one characteristic in common: it was the willingness to confront unequivocally the major anxiety of their people in their time. This, and not much else, is the essence of leadership.
    John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)