How did Germany’s top female golfers perform on the LPGA and LET in 2025? A look at earnings, wins and financial disparities.
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Nastasia Nadaud claims the LET Andalucia Open De Espana title as Shannon Tan secures the season crown. Olivia Cowan finishes in the top 3.
Leonie Harm stays in contention at the Ladies European Tour finale. Cowan, Briem and Försterling also post solid rounds.
Leonie Harm and Kim Metraux opened the LET finale with strong rounds, while Soenderby and Cheenglab set the early pace.
Jeeno Thitikul caps off a stellar season with a win at the CME Group Tour Championship and defends her Race to CME Globe title.
Jeeno Thitikul takes the lead at the CME Group Tour Championship with a flawless 63, while Esther Henseleit slips down the leaderboard.
Esther Henseleit opens the CME Group Tour Championship with a strong 68 to finish T7 after the first round in Naples, Florida.
Just a few weeks ago, Korda seemed nearly unbeatable. Four consecutive victories at the start of the 2025 season left little doubt that this year could be hers. But following an early exit at the Mizuho Americas Open and a missed opportunity at the U.S. Women’s Open in Erin Hills, the American superstar appears to have lost some momentum. Now, the third Major of the year awaits — and Korda is not at full strength.
On Tuesday, she had to skip the traditional Champions Dinner due to an acute neck cramp. “I’ve been playing in constant pain,” she told the media. While regular physical therapy is helping, she admitted she’s still not completely pain-free.
Fighting despite injury: Korda remains a top candidate
Despite her physical issues, Korda remains one of the favorites. With 15 LPGA Tour titles, an Olympic gold medal, and a Major win at the PGA Championship in 2021, the 26-year-old brings both talent and experience to the field. While she hasn’t won in 2025 yet, she has recorded four Top 10 finishes in nine starts, and she continues to hold the No. 1 spot in the world rankings.
“It just makes you hungrier,” Korda said of her Open heartache. “For me, I hate making mistakes; obviously I love winning. You don’t get to win often, but there’s nothing like it being in contention, so I think that’s kind of what makes me hungrier to come back and to work harder and put myself into that position.”
Reflecting on her runner-up finish at the U.S. Women’s Open, she added: “I was in the hunt, I was right there. That’s a good thing. You can look at it negatively, but a few weeks later, I can also use it as motivation. Hopefully, it makes me hungrier.”
Statistically, Korda was among the best at the U.S. Open in both Strokes Gained: Off the Tee and Approach. It was mainly her putting that kept her from lifting the trophy.
Another positive: Her older sister Jessica Korda is returning to competition after a long injury break. In tough moments, that family support seems especially meaningful.
Heat and Competition Add to the Challenge
In addition to her physical struggles, extreme heat will be a major factor at Sahalee Country Club, with temperatures expected to reach around 35°C during the tournament days — making both endurance and course strategy crucial.
The field is stacked, too: Lydia Ko, Brooke Henderson, Minjee Lee, Rose Zhang, and Sweden’s Maja Stark — whom Korda narrowly beat at the U.S. Open — are all heading into the Major with title ambitions. Revenge could be on the cards.
The 2025 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship on the LPGA Tour is making headlines with a significant prize money increase. With a total purse of 12 million U.S. dollars, the tournament now stands alongside the U.S. Women’s Open as the most lucrative event on the LPGA Tour calendar. The winner will receive a prize of 1.8 million U.S. dollars.
LPGA Tour: Record Purse Marks a Milestone for Women’s Golf
Compared to the previous year, this represents an increase of 1.6 million dollars – the total purse in 2024 was 10.4 million. KPMG CEO Paul Knopp emphasized the strategic significance of this development in an official statement: “We are incredibly proud to make this happen. It reflects our commitment to setting a standard of excellence in women’s golf. Prize money plays a central role in that. For us, this is a long-term strategy to support success. We continue to stage the tournament at iconic venues that earn recognition in the golf world year after year. We’re excited about the path we’ve chosen,” said Knopp.
Prize Money Growth Across the LPGA Tour
This increase is part of a broader upward trend on the LPGA Tour. Over the past years, total prize money has steadily climbed; in 2025 it reaches approximately 132.6 million U.S. dollars – a record amount. Other majors like the Chevron Championship (8 million USD) and the AIG Women’s Open (9.5 million USD) have also seen notable growth. The U.S. Women’s Open most recently offered 12 million dollars in total, with 2.4 million awarded to the winner, also a record.
For the first time, the tournament will be played at Fields Ranch East in Frisco, Texas. The modern course is part of the new PGA of America headquarters and is intended to become a long-term host for major championships. In addition to being a sporting highlight, Frisco offers the infrastructure to stage a globally prominent event.
Beyond the increased purse, this year’s edition features extensive media coverage. Over 100 hours of live broadcasts, including featured groups and real-time statistics, will be aired on NBC, Golf Channel, and the streaming platform Peacock. A special highlight is the use of AI-based tools providing detailed game analysis for players and viewers alike.
At first glance, this year’s U.S. Women’s Open at Erin Hills offered all the hallmarks of a breakthrough moment for women’s golf. “I think if women’s golf was a stock, you’d buy it because it’s what’s driving our game forward,” declared USGA CEO Mike Whan. “The first thing they would say about the future is the future of the game looks more female than it’s ever looked in 100 years. That’s an exciting time.”
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It’s a sentiment shared by many, and rightly so. The talent pool has never been deeper, the storylines more compelling, or the athleticism more evident. Yet amid all the deserved optimism, an all-too-familiar issue once again cast a long shadow: pace of play.
Despite years of dialogue and supposed reforms, slow play remains a thorn in the side of the women’s game. And at Erin Hills, it reached a boiling point. Several groups took well over three hours to complete just nine holes, grinding the tournament to an excruciating crawl and drawing criticism from fans, media, and players alike.
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This isn’t a new dilemma. The LPGA Tour and the Ladies European Tour have both faced mounting pressure to tackle the problem, especially in marquee events. But for all the promises of change, the pace at the U.S. Women’s Open suggested that the message hasn’t quite landed.
No one embodied the frustration more than Charley Hull. Paired with the ever-methodical Lexi Thompson, Hull’s irritation was plain to see—and she didn’t try to hide it.
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She was seen walking off greens before her group had finished, heading straight to the next tee box, even sitting down in the rough in silent protest. Her body language spoke volumes—and quickly went viral.
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Hull’s exasperation echoed the concerns of fellow star Nelly Korda, who has also been vocal about the need for stricter enforcement. And while tournament officials have introduced new policies in recent seasons, those guardrails were evidently missing in Wisconsin.
The stakes are high. Women’s golf is enjoying a long-overdue surge in popularity, and moments like Erin Hills should be showcasing the sport’s brilliance—not bogging it down with marathon rounds and player frustration. The USGA and its partners must act decisively. Because if women’s golf is indeed on the rise, it cannot afford to trip over the same stumbling block again and again.
Let the headlines be about the birdies, not the bottlenecks.