BMW Ladies Championship
Tournament information
LocationGyeonggi Province, South Korea (2023)
Established2019
Course(s)Seowon Valley Country Club (2023)
Par72
Length6,647 yards (6,078 m)
Tour(s)LPGA Tour
LPGA of Korea Tour
FormatStroke play - 72 holes, no cut
Prize fund$2.2 million
Month playedOctober
Tournament record score
Aggregate266 Ko Jin-young (2021)
To par−22 as above
Current champion
Australia Minjee Lee
Gyeonggi Province is located in South Korea
Gyeonggi Province
Gyeonggi Province
Location in South Korea

The BMW Ladies Championship is a women's professional golf tournament in Wonju,[1] South Korea, co-sanctioned by the LPGA of Korea Tour and the LPGA Tour. It debuted in 2019.[2] It replaced the LPGA KEB Hana Bank Championship as the LPGA Tour's Korean stop on its Asian swing.

It is a 72-hole event with a limited field of 84 players, approximately half of a full-field event. There is no cut; all players play all four rounds.

Jang Ha-na won the inaugural event in a playoff over Danielle Kang.[3]

An LPGA of Korea Tour event of the same name was played from 2015 to 2017 at the Sky 72 Golf Club, home of the LPGA KEB Hana Bank Championship.

Lydia Ko won in 2022, at Wonju, approximately 140 kilometres (87 mi) east of Seoul, her birthplace, for her 18th LPGA Tour victory.[4]

Winners

YearTour(s)DateChampionCountryScoreTo parPurse
($)
Winner's
share ($)
2023LPGA22 OctMinjee Lee Australia272−162,200,000330,000
2022LPGA23 OctLydia Ko New Zealand267−212,000,000300,000
2021LPGA, KLPGA24 OctKo Jin-young South Korea266−222,000,000300,000
2020Canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic[5][6]
2019LPGA, KLPGA27 OctJang Ha-na South Korea269−192,000,000300,000
YearTour(s)DateChampionCountryScoreTo parPurse
()
Winner's
share (₩)
2018No tournament
2017KLPGA17 SepKo Jin-young South Korea272−121,200,000,000300,000,000
2016KLPGA17 JulKo Jin-young South Korea275−131,200,000,000300,000,000
2015KLPGA19 JulCho Yoon-ji South Korea270−181,200,000,000300,000,000

Tournament record

As LPGA Tour event

YearPlayerScoreRound
2022Atthaya Thitikul63 (−9)1st

References

  1. "Oak Valley Country Club". Robert Trent Jones Golf Course Architects. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  2. Sirak, Ron (21 October 2019). "Inaugural BMW Ladies Championship a Landmark Event for the Women's Game". LPGA.
  3. "Ha Na Jang beats Danielle Kang in LPGA playoff in South Korea". ESPN. Associated Press. 27 October 2019.
  4. "Lydia Ko returns to country of her birth to win BMW Ladies Championship". Golf Channel. Associated Press. 23 October 2022. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  5. Song, David (15 September 2020). "LPGA announces second Drive On Championship, cancels Asian swing". Golfweek.
  6. "LPGA Announces New Drive On Championship Amid Asia Cancellations". LPGA. 15 September 2020.

35°17′17″N 129°14′31″E / 35.288°N 129.242°E / 35.288; 129.242

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