Green was the first player to be announced for the inaugural WPGA Championship, but increasing border restrictions in her home state of Western Australia through to February 5 have forced Green to withdraw from the tournament.
For the first time in the history of the LPGA Tour, the Q-Series will be conducted over two weeks with Robyn Choi, Karis Davidson, Stephanie Kyriacou and Sarah Jane Smith earning exemptions in a variety of different ways.
In women’s golf, there aren’t a lot of opportunities to win $1 million.
It’s a venue where she has tasted victory in the past and now Hannah Green has vowed to emulate fellow West Australian Daniel Ricciardo’s post-race ‘shoey’ celebration if she wins this week’s LPGA Tour Cambia Portland Classic in Oregon.
Major champion Hannah Green will devote part of her preparation to making fellow West Australian Kirsten Rudgeley feel at home among the elite of world golf at this week’s AIG Women’s Open at Carnoustie Golf Links in Scotland.
For the second week in a row, Australia came up short at Kasumigaseki Country Club as Hannah Green’s three-under final round was not enough to secure a medal.
Mother Nature will now decide whether the tournament goes the full 72 holes.
The naysayers who argue that golf does not need the Olympics because it has big championships and big tours miss one important point.
Hannah Green has one eye on an Olympic medal and another on the weather forecast after peeling off eight birdies in a second round of six-under 65 at the women’s golf competition at Kasumigaseki Country Club on Thursday.
Green will resume play at the Tokyo Olympics, where she will represent Australia as an Olympian for the first time.
Green’s strong play presents a chance to pass Minjee Lee to become the top Australian in the world.
The Kiwi sensation finished her round with some fireworks
Hannah Green learned a lot from her Major championship win at Hazeltine last year, most of all about the need for mental toughness.
Webb penned her thoughts on Australian Golf Digest’s latest cover via Twitter
Australia’s latest Major champion Hannah Green has capped an extraordinary 2019 season by receiving the most prestigious award in Australian golf
Green’s 72nd-hole par save kept Yealimi Noh from becoming the third Monday qualifier ever to win on the LPGA Tour.
Despite her Major triumph, Green said she won’t change too much in terms of her goals for the rest of 2019.Â
Hannah Green is a people person, which is why she took the poem that a seven-year-old girl wrote to her to heart at Hazeltine today.
The first step to becoming the next queen of Australian golf? Get better at being your own travel agent.
How much did everybody who made the cut earn this week in Chaska, Minnesota? Here’s the results with the prizemoney payout for each golfer from the $3.85 million.