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)

    You should hurry up ... and acquire the cigar habit. It’s one of the major happinesses. And so much more lasting than love, so much less costly in emotional wear and tear.
    Aldous Huxley (1894–1963)