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KPMG Women’s PGA: Can It Ignite Golf’s Missing Roar?

Amy Yang, winner 2024 KPMG Women's PGA Championship

The men’s US Open at Oakmont saw JJ Spaun rise from underdog to champion in dramatic fashion. Despite the rain, the soaked galleries were treated to one of the most electrifying finishes in recent US Open history, delivered with the kind of buzz only a men’s Major seems to reliably generate.

All eyes now turn to the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship, the third women’s Major on the calendar, which begins on Thursday at the Fields Ranch East course at PGA Frisco in Texas. Let’s be honest, the two prior women’s Majors, The Chevron Championship and the US Women’s Open, have lacked the vibrant buzz and widespread fanfare they rightfully deserve.

Unlike men’s Majors, which consistently stand apart from typical PGA Tour events with significant media coverage, attendance, and viewership, women’s Majors often fall short of this crucial distinction, particularly when scheduling conflicts with a men’s signature event, like this week’s Travelers Championship.

Amy Yang, winner 2024 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Cast your mind back to 2014 it was great when the USGA held the US Open and US Women’s Open in consecutive weeks at Pinehurst No. 2. The aim was to bring more attention to women’s golf, and this back-to-back staging successfully elevated the visibility and recognition of the women’s Major. However, we’ll have to wait until 2029 to see this happen again at Pinehurst.

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