The Ladies European Tour (LET) is the top-level women’s professional golf tour for Europe-based golfers. Membership is open to golfers of all nationalities and over time the tour has expanded to hold tournaments outside of Europe, including in Asia and the Middle East. Today, the tour plays as many tournaments outside of Europe as it does in the U.K. and Continental Europe.

As the top European golf tour for women, the LET is one of the world’s top women’s golf tours and its tournaments award ranking points for the Rolex Rankings, the women’s world golf ranking system.

The Ladies European Tour and LPGA Tour collaborate in running the Solheim Cup, one of the highest-profile events in women’s professional golf.

The LET was founded in 1978 (originally called the WPGA — Women’s Professional Golf Association — Tour), and its first season of tournaments was in 1979. After a couple name changes, “Ladies European Tour” has been the official name since 2000.

For the list of coming events, with dates and locations, see the schedule section of the LET website.

Today the tour is headquartered at Buckinghamshire Golf Club outside of London. The tour’s contact info:

AddressBuckinghamshire Golf ClubDenham Court DriveDenhamBuckinghamshireUB9 5PGUnited Kingdom

Phone: +44 (0)1895 831028 Website: ladieseuropeantour.com Social media: @LETgolf on Twitter; @letgolf on Instagram; facebook.com/LadiesEuropeanTour

Relationship of LET and LPGA

The two tours partner to run the biggest event in women’s golf, the every-other-year Solheim Cup. In the Solheim Cup, a team of American golfers from the LPGA Tour play a team of European golfers. While the majority of players on Team Europe in the Solheim Cup play on the LPGA, all of them have membership on the LET. (European golfers who do not have LET membership are ineligible for the Solheim Cup.)

The tours also collaborate by co-sanctioning multiple tournaments each year, meaning that each tour has a hand in determining qualifications for those events, and each tour counts such tournaments as official events. Those tournaments include two majors, the Evian Championship and Women’s British Open, plus the Ladies Scottish Open.

In 2019, the LPGA and LET announced a more formal relationship between the two tours that included the LPGA assisting with marketing, tournament promotion and development.

How to Qualify for the Ladies European Tour

Membership on the LET is earned primarily through one of two ways: by finishing high enough in the LET’s “tour school” series of qualifying tournaments; or by playing on the developmental tour, the LET Access Series, and earning promotion.

The LET Access Series is the official developmental tour of the LET, and each year the top five finishers on the LETAS money list automatically earn LET membership. Players finishing 6-20 get to skip earlier stages of tour school and advance directly to the final tour school qualifying tournament.

The official name of the LET’s tour school is Lalla Aicha Tour School. There are three pre-qualifying tournaments that tour hopefuls can enter, one each in October, November, and December every year. Golfers who finish high enough in the pre-qualifiers advance into the Final Stage qualifier, played in Morocco in December. And the highest finishers at that Final Stage qualifier earn the right to play LET tournaments for the following season.

Ladies European Tour Award Winners

The LET has named a Player of the Year since 1995 and a Rookie of the Year since 1984. These are the golfers who’ve won those awards:

  Player of the Year Rookie of the Year

2019 Marianna Skarpnord Esther Henseleit

2018 Georgia Hall Julia Engstrom

2017 Georgia Hall Camille Chevalier

2016 Beth Allen Aditi Ashok

2015 Nicole Broch Larsen Emily Kristine Pedersen

2014 Charley Hull Amy Boulden

2013 Lee-Anne Pace Charley Hull

2012 Carlota Ciganda Carlota Ciganda

2011 Caroline Hedwall Caroline Hedwall

2010 Lee-Anne Pace I.K. Kim

2009 Catriona Matthew Anna Nordqvist

2008 Gwladys Nocera Melissa Reid

2007 Bettina Hauert Louise Stahle

2006 Gwladys Nocera Nikki Garrett

2005 Iben Tinning Elisa Serramia

2004 Stephanie Arricau Minea Blomqvist

2003 Sophie Gustafson Rebecca Stevenson

2002 Annika Sorenstam Kirsty Taylor

2001 Raquel Carriedo Suzann Pettersen

2000 Sophie Gustafson Giulia Sergas

1999 Laura Davies Elaine Ratcliffe

1998 Sophie Gustafson Laura Philo (Diaz)

1997 Alison Nicholas Anna Berg

1996 Laura Davies Anne Marie Knight

1995 Annika Sorenstam Karrie Webb

1994   Tracy Hanson

1993   Annika Sorenstam

1992   Sandrine Mendiburu

1991   Helen Wadsworth

1990   Pearl Sinn

1989   Helen Alfredsson

1988   Laurette Maritz

1987   Trish Johnson

1986   Patricia Gonzalez

1985   Laura Davies

1984   Kitrina Douglas

LET Records and Top Golfers

Nobody who has followed the Ladies European Tour over the years will argue this statement: Laura Davies is the greatest player in LET history.

How can we be so sure? Davies holds the LET’s all-time record for most victories with 45 wins — more than twice as many as the golfer in second place on that list. The winningest LET golfers are Davies with 45, then Dale Reid, 21 wins; Marie-Laure de Lorenzi and Trish Johnson with 19 each; Annika Sorenstam, 17; and Sophie Gustafson, 16.

De Lorenzi has the tour’s record for most wins in a single season with seven in 1988.

The oldest winner of an LET tournament is Trish Johnson, who was 48 when she claimed the 2014 Aberdeen Asset Management Ladies Scottish Open. The youngest winner is Atthaya Thitikul, who, at age 14, won the 2017 Ladies European Thailand Championship.

The 18-hole scoring record (on a regulation-length and -par golf course) for LET tournaments is 61. That score was first achieved in 2005 by Kirsty Taylor at the Wales Ladies Championship of Europe. Since then, it’s been matched by Nina Reis (2008), Karrie Webb (2010) and So Yeon Ryu (2012).

The LET record for most strokes under par in a tournament is 29-under, set by Gwladys Nocera with a score of 259 at the 2008 Goteborg Masters.

Suzann Pettersen: Bio of the LPGA Star

Korn Ferry Tour

Inbee Park, Also Known as ‘Winbee’

The Top 50 Women Golfers of All Time

Famous Male Golfers

Gleneagles, Scotland: Golf Courses and Major Tournaments

Biography of Golfer Brooke Henderson

Mark O’Meara: A Consistent Career Topped By One Great Year

Turkish Airlines Open on the European Tour

The PGA Tour’s Oldest Rookies

European Tour KLM Open

‘The Big Break’ Series: All the Winners, Cast Members and Seasons

What Is a Green in Regulation (GIR)?

Quail Hollow Club: Major Championship Site and PGA Tour Golf Course

The Lowest 18-Hole Golf Score Ever Recorded

Top 25 Male Golfers of All-Time

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LiveAbout is part of the Dotdash Meredith publishing family.

When you visit the site, Dotdash Meredith and its partners may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. Cookies collect information about your preferences and your devices and are used to make the site work as you expect it to, to understand how you interact with the site, and to show advertisements that are targeted to your interests. You can find out more about our use, change your default settings, and withdraw your consent at any time with effect for the future by visiting Cookies Settings, which can also be found in the footer of the site. Cookies Settings Reject All Accept Cookies

The Ladies European Tour (LET) is the top-level women’s professional golf tour for Europe-based golfers. Membership is open to golfers of all nationalities and over time the tour has expanded to hold tournaments outside of Europe, including in Asia and the Middle East. Today, the tour plays as many tournaments outside of Europe as it does in the U.K. and Continental Europe.

As the top European golf tour for women, the LET is one of the world’s top women’s golf tours and its tournaments award ranking points for the Rolex Rankings, the women’s world golf ranking system.

The Ladies European Tour and LPGA Tour collaborate in running the Solheim Cup, one of the highest-profile events in women’s professional golf.

The LET was founded in 1978 (originally called the WPGA — Women’s Professional Golf Association — Tour), and its first season of tournaments was in 1979. After a couple name changes, “Ladies European Tour” has been the official name since 2000.

For the list of coming events, with dates and locations, see the schedule section of the LET website.

Today the tour is headquartered at Buckinghamshire Golf Club outside of London. The tour’s contact info:

AddressBuckinghamshire Golf ClubDenham Court DriveDenhamBuckinghamshireUB9 5PGUnited Kingdom

Phone: +44 (0)1895 831028 Website: ladieseuropeantour.com Social media: @LETgolf on Twitter; @letgolf on Instagram; facebook.com/LadiesEuropeanTour

Relationship of LET and LPGA

The two tours partner to run the biggest event in women’s golf, the every-other-year Solheim Cup. In the Solheim Cup, a team of American golfers from the LPGA Tour play a team of European golfers. While the majority of players on Team Europe in the Solheim Cup play on the LPGA, all of them have membership on the LET. (European golfers who do not have LET membership are ineligible for the Solheim Cup.)

The tours also collaborate by co-sanctioning multiple tournaments each year, meaning that each tour has a hand in determining qualifications for those events, and each tour counts such tournaments as official events. Those tournaments include two majors, the Evian Championship and Women’s British Open, plus the Ladies Scottish Open.

In 2019, the LPGA and LET announced a more formal relationship between the two tours that included the LPGA assisting with marketing, tournament promotion and development.

How to Qualify for the Ladies European Tour

Membership on the LET is earned primarily through one of two ways: by finishing high enough in the LET’s “tour school” series of qualifying tournaments; or by playing on the developmental tour, the LET Access Series, and earning promotion.

The LET Access Series is the official developmental tour of the LET, and each year the top five finishers on the LETAS money list automatically earn LET membership. Players finishing 6-20 get to skip earlier stages of tour school and advance directly to the final tour school qualifying tournament.

The official name of the LET’s tour school is Lalla Aicha Tour School. There are three pre-qualifying tournaments that tour hopefuls can enter, one each in October, November, and December every year. Golfers who finish high enough in the pre-qualifiers advance into the Final Stage qualifier, played in Morocco in December. And the highest finishers at that Final Stage qualifier earn the right to play LET tournaments for the following season.

Ladies European Tour Award Winners

The LET has named a Player of the Year since 1995 and a Rookie of the Year since 1984. These are the golfers who’ve won those awards:

  Player of the Year Rookie of the Year

2019 Marianna Skarpnord Esther Henseleit

2018 Georgia Hall Julia Engstrom

2017 Georgia Hall Camille Chevalier

2016 Beth Allen Aditi Ashok

2015 Nicole Broch Larsen Emily Kristine Pedersen

2014 Charley Hull Amy Boulden

2013 Lee-Anne Pace Charley Hull

2012 Carlota Ciganda Carlota Ciganda

2011 Caroline Hedwall Caroline Hedwall

2010 Lee-Anne Pace I.K. Kim

2009 Catriona Matthew Anna Nordqvist

2008 Gwladys Nocera Melissa Reid

2007 Bettina Hauert Louise Stahle

2006 Gwladys Nocera Nikki Garrett

2005 Iben Tinning Elisa Serramia

2004 Stephanie Arricau Minea Blomqvist

2003 Sophie Gustafson Rebecca Stevenson

2002 Annika Sorenstam Kirsty Taylor

2001 Raquel Carriedo Suzann Pettersen

2000 Sophie Gustafson Giulia Sergas

1999 Laura Davies Elaine Ratcliffe

1998 Sophie Gustafson Laura Philo (Diaz)

1997 Alison Nicholas Anna Berg

1996 Laura Davies Anne Marie Knight

1995 Annika Sorenstam Karrie Webb

1994   Tracy Hanson

1993   Annika Sorenstam

1992   Sandrine Mendiburu

1991   Helen Wadsworth

1990   Pearl Sinn

1989   Helen Alfredsson

1988   Laurette Maritz

1987   Trish Johnson

1986   Patricia Gonzalez

1985   Laura Davies

1984   Kitrina Douglas

LET Records and Top Golfers

Nobody who has followed the Ladies European Tour over the years will argue this statement: Laura Davies is the greatest player in LET history.

How can we be so sure? Davies holds the LET’s all-time record for most victories with 45 wins — more than twice as many as the golfer in second place on that list. The winningest LET golfers are Davies with 45, then Dale Reid, 21 wins; Marie-Laure de Lorenzi and Trish Johnson with 19 each; Annika Sorenstam, 17; and Sophie Gustafson, 16.

De Lorenzi has the tour’s record for most wins in a single season with seven in 1988.

The oldest winner of an LET tournament is Trish Johnson, who was 48 when she claimed the 2014 Aberdeen Asset Management Ladies Scottish Open. The youngest winner is Atthaya Thitikul, who, at age 14, won the 2017 Ladies European Thailand Championship.

The 18-hole scoring record (on a regulation-length and -par golf course) for LET tournaments is 61. That score was first achieved in 2005 by Kirsty Taylor at the Wales Ladies Championship of Europe. Since then, it’s been matched by Nina Reis (2008), Karrie Webb (2010) and So Yeon Ryu (2012).

The LET record for most strokes under par in a tournament is 29-under, set by Gwladys Nocera with a score of 259 at the 2008 Goteborg Masters.

Suzann Pettersen: Bio of the LPGA Star

Korn Ferry Tour

Inbee Park, Also Known as ‘Winbee’

The Top 50 Women Golfers of All Time

Famous Male Golfers

Gleneagles, Scotland: Golf Courses and Major Tournaments

Biography of Golfer Brooke Henderson

Mark O’Meara: A Consistent Career Topped By One Great Year

Turkish Airlines Open on the European Tour

The PGA Tour’s Oldest Rookies

European Tour KLM Open

‘The Big Break’ Series: All the Winners, Cast Members and Seasons

What Is a Green in Regulation (GIR)?

Quail Hollow Club: Major Championship Site and PGA Tour Golf Course

The Lowest 18-Hole Golf Score Ever Recorded

Top 25 Male Golfers of All-Time

When you visit the site, Dotdash Meredith and its partners may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. Cookies collect information about your preferences and your devices and are used to make the site work as you expect it to, to understand how you interact with the site, and to show advertisements that are targeted to your interests. You can find out more about our use, change your default settings, and withdraw your consent at any time with effect for the future by visiting Cookies Settings, which can also be found in the footer of the site. Cookies Settings Reject All Accept Cookies

The Ladies European Tour (LET) is the top-level women’s professional golf tour for Europe-based golfers. Membership is open to golfers of all nationalities and over time the tour has expanded to hold tournaments outside of Europe, including in Asia and the Middle East. Today, the tour plays as many tournaments outside of Europe as it does in the U.K. and Continental Europe.

As the top European golf tour for women, the LET is one of the world’s top women’s golf tours and its tournaments award ranking points for the Rolex Rankings, the women’s world golf ranking system.

The Ladies European Tour and LPGA Tour collaborate in running the Solheim Cup, one of the highest-profile events in women’s professional golf.

The LET was founded in 1978 (originally called the WPGA — Women’s Professional Golf Association — Tour), and its first season of tournaments was in 1979. After a couple name changes, “Ladies European Tour” has been the official name since 2000.

For the list of coming events, with dates and locations, see the schedule section of the LET website.

Today the tour is headquartered at Buckinghamshire Golf Club outside of London. The tour’s contact info:

AddressBuckinghamshire Golf ClubDenham Court DriveDenhamBuckinghamshireUB9 5PGUnited Kingdom

Phone: +44 (0)1895 831028 Website: ladieseuropeantour.com Social media: @LETgolf on Twitter; @letgolf on Instagram; facebook.com/LadiesEuropeanTour

Relationship of LET and LPGA

The two tours partner to run the biggest event in women’s golf, the every-other-year Solheim Cup. In the Solheim Cup, a team of American golfers from the LPGA Tour play a team of European golfers. While the majority of players on Team Europe in the Solheim Cup play on the LPGA, all of them have membership on the LET. (European golfers who do not have LET membership are ineligible for the Solheim Cup.)

The tours also collaborate by co-sanctioning multiple tournaments each year, meaning that each tour has a hand in determining qualifications for those events, and each tour counts such tournaments as official events. Those tournaments include two majors, the Evian Championship and Women’s British Open, plus the Ladies Scottish Open.

In 2019, the LPGA and LET announced a more formal relationship between the two tours that included the LPGA assisting with marketing, tournament promotion and development.

How to Qualify for the Ladies European Tour

Membership on the LET is earned primarily through one of two ways: by finishing high enough in the LET’s “tour school” series of qualifying tournaments; or by playing on the developmental tour, the LET Access Series, and earning promotion.

The LET Access Series is the official developmental tour of the LET, and each year the top five finishers on the LETAS money list automatically earn LET membership. Players finishing 6-20 get to skip earlier stages of tour school and advance directly to the final tour school qualifying tournament.

The official name of the LET’s tour school is Lalla Aicha Tour School. There are three pre-qualifying tournaments that tour hopefuls can enter, one each in October, November, and December every year. Golfers who finish high enough in the pre-qualifiers advance into the Final Stage qualifier, played in Morocco in December. And the highest finishers at that Final Stage qualifier earn the right to play LET tournaments for the following season.

Ladies European Tour Award Winners

The LET has named a Player of the Year since 1995 and a Rookie of the Year since 1984. These are the golfers who’ve won those awards:

  Player of the Year Rookie of the Year

2019 Marianna Skarpnord Esther Henseleit

2018 Georgia Hall Julia Engstrom

2017 Georgia Hall Camille Chevalier

2016 Beth Allen Aditi Ashok

2015 Nicole Broch Larsen Emily Kristine Pedersen

2014 Charley Hull Amy Boulden

2013 Lee-Anne Pace Charley Hull

2012 Carlota Ciganda Carlota Ciganda

2011 Caroline Hedwall Caroline Hedwall

2010 Lee-Anne Pace I.K. Kim

2009 Catriona Matthew Anna Nordqvist

2008 Gwladys Nocera Melissa Reid

2007 Bettina Hauert Louise Stahle

2006 Gwladys Nocera Nikki Garrett

2005 Iben Tinning Elisa Serramia

2004 Stephanie Arricau Minea Blomqvist

2003 Sophie Gustafson Rebecca Stevenson

2002 Annika Sorenstam Kirsty Taylor

2001 Raquel Carriedo Suzann Pettersen

2000 Sophie Gustafson Giulia Sergas

1999 Laura Davies Elaine Ratcliffe

1998 Sophie Gustafson Laura Philo (Diaz)

1997 Alison Nicholas Anna Berg

1996 Laura Davies Anne Marie Knight

1995 Annika Sorenstam Karrie Webb

1994   Tracy Hanson

1993   Annika Sorenstam

1992   Sandrine Mendiburu

1991   Helen Wadsworth

1990   Pearl Sinn

1989   Helen Alfredsson

1988   Laurette Maritz

1987   Trish Johnson

1986   Patricia Gonzalez

1985   Laura Davies

1984   Kitrina Douglas

LET Records and Top Golfers

Nobody who has followed the Ladies European Tour over the years will argue this statement: Laura Davies is the greatest player in LET history.

How can we be so sure? Davies holds the LET’s all-time record for most victories with 45 wins — more than twice as many as the golfer in second place on that list. The winningest LET golfers are Davies with 45, then Dale Reid, 21 wins; Marie-Laure de Lorenzi and Trish Johnson with 19 each; Annika Sorenstam, 17; and Sophie Gustafson, 16.

De Lorenzi has the tour’s record for most wins in a single season with seven in 1988.

The oldest winner of an LET tournament is Trish Johnson, who was 48 when she claimed the 2014 Aberdeen Asset Management Ladies Scottish Open. The youngest winner is Atthaya Thitikul, who, at age 14, won the 2017 Ladies European Thailand Championship.

The 18-hole scoring record (on a regulation-length and -par golf course) for LET tournaments is 61. That score was first achieved in 2005 by Kirsty Taylor at the Wales Ladies Championship of Europe. Since then, it’s been matched by Nina Reis (2008), Karrie Webb (2010) and So Yeon Ryu (2012).

The LET record for most strokes under par in a tournament is 29-under, set by Gwladys Nocera with a score of 259 at the 2008 Goteborg Masters.

The Ladies European Tour (LET) is the top-level women’s professional golf tour for Europe-based golfers. Membership is open to golfers of all nationalities and over time the tour has expanded to hold tournaments outside of Europe, including in Asia and the Middle East. Today, the tour plays as many tournaments outside of Europe as it does in the U.K. and Continental Europe.

As the top European golf tour for women, the LET is one of the world’s top women’s golf tours and its tournaments award ranking points for the Rolex Rankings, the women’s world golf ranking system.

The Ladies European Tour and LPGA Tour collaborate in running the Solheim Cup, one of the highest-profile events in women’s professional golf.

The LET was founded in 1978 (originally called the WPGA — Women’s Professional Golf Association — Tour), and its first season of tournaments was in 1979. After a couple name changes, “Ladies European Tour” has been the official name since 2000.

For the list of coming events, with dates and locations, see the schedule section of the LET website.

Today the tour is headquartered at Buckinghamshire Golf Club outside of London. The tour’s contact info:

AddressBuckinghamshire Golf ClubDenham Court DriveDenhamBuckinghamshireUB9 5PGUnited Kingdom

  • Phone: +44 (0)1895 831028
  • Website: ladieseuropeantour.com
  • Social media: @LETgolf on Twitter; @letgolf on Instagram; facebook.com/LadiesEuropeanTour

Relationship of LET and LPGA

The two tours partner to run the biggest event in women’s golf, the every-other-year Solheim Cup. In the Solheim Cup, a team of American golfers from the LPGA Tour play a team of European golfers. While the majority of players on Team Europe in the Solheim Cup play on the LPGA, all of them have membership on the LET. (European golfers who do not have LET membership are ineligible for the Solheim Cup.)

The tours also collaborate by co-sanctioning multiple tournaments each year, meaning that each tour has a hand in determining qualifications for those events, and each tour counts such tournaments as official events. Those tournaments include two majors, the Evian Championship and Women’s British Open, plus the Ladies Scottish Open.

In 2019, the LPGA and LET announced a more formal relationship between the two tours that included the LPGA assisting with marketing, tournament promotion and development.

How to Qualify for the Ladies European Tour

Membership on the LET is earned primarily through one of two ways: by finishing high enough in the LET’s “tour school” series of qualifying tournaments; or by playing on the developmental tour, the LET Access Series, and earning promotion.

The LET Access Series is the official developmental tour of the LET, and each year the top five finishers on the LETAS money list automatically earn LET membership. Players finishing 6-20 get to skip earlier stages of tour school and advance directly to the final tour school qualifying tournament.

The official name of the LET’s tour school is Lalla Aicha Tour School. There are three pre-qualifying tournaments that tour hopefuls can enter, one each in October, November, and December every year. Golfers who finish high enough in the pre-qualifiers advance into the Final Stage qualifier, played in Morocco in December. And the highest finishers at that Final Stage qualifier earn the right to play LET tournaments for the following season.

Ladies European Tour Award Winners

The LET has named a Player of the Year since 1995 and a Rookie of the Year since 1984. These are the golfers who’ve won those awards:

  Player of the Year Rookie of the Year

2019 Marianna Skarpnord Esther Henseleit

2018 Georgia Hall Julia Engstrom

2017 Georgia Hall Camille Chevalier

2016 Beth Allen Aditi Ashok

2015 Nicole Broch Larsen Emily Kristine Pedersen

2014 Charley Hull Amy Boulden

2013 Lee-Anne Pace Charley Hull

2012 Carlota Ciganda Carlota Ciganda

2011 Caroline Hedwall Caroline Hedwall

2010 Lee-Anne Pace I.K. Kim

2009 Catriona Matthew Anna Nordqvist

2008 Gwladys Nocera Melissa Reid

2007 Bettina Hauert Louise Stahle

2006 Gwladys Nocera Nikki Garrett

2005 Iben Tinning Elisa Serramia

2004 Stephanie Arricau Minea Blomqvist

2003 Sophie Gustafson Rebecca Stevenson

2002 Annika Sorenstam Kirsty Taylor

2001 Raquel Carriedo Suzann Pettersen

2000 Sophie Gustafson Giulia Sergas

1999 Laura Davies Elaine Ratcliffe

1998 Sophie Gustafson Laura Philo (Diaz)

1997 Alison Nicholas Anna Berg

1996 Laura Davies Anne Marie Knight

1995 Annika Sorenstam Karrie Webb

1994   Tracy Hanson

1993   Annika Sorenstam

1992   Sandrine Mendiburu

1991   Helen Wadsworth

1990   Pearl Sinn

1989   Helen Alfredsson

1988   Laurette Maritz

1987   Trish Johnson

1986   Patricia Gonzalez

1985   Laura Davies

1984   Kitrina Douglas

LET Records and Top Golfers

Nobody who has followed the Ladies European Tour over the years will argue this statement: Laura Davies is the greatest player in LET history.

How can we be so sure? Davies holds the LET’s all-time record for most victories with 45 wins — more than twice as many as the golfer in second place on that list. The winningest LET golfers are Davies with 45, then Dale Reid, 21 wins; Marie-Laure de Lorenzi and Trish Johnson with 19 each; Annika Sorenstam, 17; and Sophie Gustafson, 16.

De Lorenzi has the tour’s record for most wins in a single season with seven in 1988.

The oldest winner of an LET tournament is Trish Johnson, who was 48 when she claimed the 2014 Aberdeen Asset Management Ladies Scottish Open. The youngest winner is Atthaya Thitikul, who, at age 14, won the 2017 Ladies European Thailand Championship.

The 18-hole scoring record (on a regulation-length and -par golf course) for LET tournaments is 61. That score was first achieved in 2005 by Kirsty Taylor at the Wales Ladies Championship of Europe. Since then, it’s been matched by Nina Reis (2008), Karrie Webb (2010) and So Yeon Ryu (2012).

The LET record for most strokes under par in a tournament is 29-under, set by Gwladys Nocera with a score of 259 at the 2008 Goteborg Masters.

LET Records and Top Golfers

Nobody who has followed the Ladies European Tour over the years will argue this statement: Laura Davies is the greatest player in LET history.

How can we be so sure? Davies holds the LET’s all-time record for most victories with 45 wins — more than twice as many as the golfer in second place on that list. The winningest LET golfers are Davies with 45, then Dale Reid, 21 wins; Marie-Laure de Lorenzi and Trish Johnson with 19 each; Annika Sorenstam, 17; and Sophie Gustafson, 16.

De Lorenzi has the tour’s record for most wins in a single season with seven in 1988.

The oldest winner of an LET tournament is Trish Johnson, who was 48 when she claimed the 2014 Aberdeen Asset Management Ladies Scottish Open. The youngest winner is Atthaya Thitikul, who, at age 14, won the 2017 Ladies European Thailand Championship.

The 18-hole scoring record (on a regulation-length and -par golf course) for LET tournaments is 61. That score was first achieved in 2005 by Kirsty Taylor at the Wales Ladies Championship of Europe. Since then, it’s been matched by Nina Reis (2008), Karrie Webb (2010) and So Yeon Ryu (2012).

The LET record for most strokes under par in a tournament is 29-under, set by Gwladys Nocera with a score of 259 at the 2008 Goteborg Masters.

  • Suzann Pettersen: Bio of the LPGA Star

  • Korn Ferry Tour

  • Inbee Park, Also Known as ‘Winbee’

  • The Top 50 Women Golfers of All Time

  • Famous Male Golfers

  • Gleneagles, Scotland: Golf Courses and Major Tournaments

  • Biography of Golfer Brooke Henderson

  • Mark O’Meara: A Consistent Career Topped By One Great Year

  • Turkish Airlines Open on the European Tour

  • The PGA Tour’s Oldest Rookies

  • European Tour KLM Open

  • ‘The Big Break’ Series: All the Winners, Cast Members and Seasons

  • What Is a Green in Regulation (GIR)?

  • Quail Hollow Club: Major Championship Site and PGA Tour Golf Course

  • The Lowest 18-Hole Golf Score Ever Recorded

  • Top 25 Male Golfers of All-Time

Suzann Pettersen: Bio of the LPGA Star

Suzann Pettersen: Bio of the LPGA Star

Korn Ferry Tour

Korn Ferry Tour

Inbee Park, Also Known as ‘Winbee’

Inbee Park, Also Known as ‘Winbee’

The Top 50 Women Golfers of All Time

The Top 50 Women Golfers of All Time

Famous Male Golfers

Famous Male Golfers

Gleneagles, Scotland: Golf Courses and Major Tournaments

Gleneagles, Scotland: Golf Courses and Major Tournaments

Biography of Golfer Brooke Henderson

Biography of Golfer Brooke Henderson

Mark O’Meara: A Consistent Career Topped By One Great Year

Mark O’Meara: A Consistent Career Topped By One Great Year

Turkish Airlines Open on the European Tour

Turkish Airlines Open on the European Tour

The PGA Tour’s Oldest Rookies

The PGA Tour’s Oldest Rookies

European Tour KLM Open

European Tour KLM Open

‘The Big Break’ Series: All the Winners, Cast Members and Seasons

‘The Big Break’ Series: All the Winners, Cast Members and Seasons

What Is a Green in Regulation (GIR)?

What Is a Green in Regulation (GIR)?

Quail Hollow Club: Major Championship Site and PGA Tour Golf Course

Quail Hollow Club: Major Championship Site and PGA Tour Golf Course

The Lowest 18-Hole Golf Score Ever Recorded

The Lowest 18-Hole Golf Score Ever Recorded

Top 25 Male Golfers of All-Time

Top 25 Male Golfers of All-Time

Home

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Activities

Humor

About Us Advertise Careers Privacy Policy Editorial Guidelines Contact Terms of Use EU Privacy

LiveAbout is part of the Dotdash Meredith publishing family.

Home

Home

Entertainment

Careers

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Humor

About Us Advertise Careers Privacy Policy Editorial Guidelines Contact Terms of Use EU Privacy

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LiveAbout is part of the Dotdash Meredith publishing family.

When you visit the site, Dotdash Meredith and its partners may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. Cookies collect information about your preferences and your devices and are used to make the site work as you expect it to, to understand how you interact with the site, and to show advertisements that are targeted to your interests. You can find out more about our use, change your default settings, and withdraw your consent at any time with effect for the future by visiting Cookies Settings, which can also be found in the footer of the site. Cookies Settings Reject All Accept Cookies