History suggests caution is advisable when assessing female golf phenoms. Michelle Wie won just a single major. Charley Hull has reached the age of 29 while scaling golfing heights, but it is fair to say wild excitement about her career when a teenage amateur has not been borne out by subsequent results. For a multitude of reasons, promise can outweigh reality.
If it were at all her style – and it is not – Lottie Woad could claim to have already justified the hype. Winning last year’s Augusta National Women’s Amateur was a statement of intent. Recent weeks have been rocket fuelled for the 21-year-old; Woad won the Irish Open and challenged for the Evian Championship while still an amateur. One professional start, at the Scottish Open, saw Woad lift the trophy on Sunday. She is the name on everyone’s lips as the Women’s Open lands at the glorious links of Royal Porthcawl this weekend.
“She’s playing great golf,” said Lydia Ko, the defending champion, of Woad. “I’ve seen her swing. My coach has sent me a video of her swing as well because there’s aspects that I’m kind of going for that she has.”
High praise. There was more, lots of it. “I think what Lottie Woad has done is absolutely unbelievable,” said Hull. “I played with her in the practice rounds in Ireland and in the first two rounds last week. At the minute I feel like she’s playing with such confidence she can’t miss a shot. I think it’s great to see. She’s a breath of fresh air for the game. I’m actually really proud of Lottie for what she’s done. That’s like goosebumps kind of stuff.”
Hull’s own buildup has been beset by illness and a back injury. “I’m not hitting it the best, which is very frustrating because it’s an event I’ve been looking forward to playing all year,” she said.
Woad will have Ko and Lilia Vu for company in the marquee grouping for days one and two. “I don’t feel too different, to be honest,” Woad said. “I got a lot of confidence from the last month, really. I am just trying to continue to ride that. There’s always pressure. I don’t think there’s any more than there was, like from my perspective, before any of the last few weeks. I was still wanting to contend and that’s still the aim.”
Like Scottie Scheffler, who is dominating the male game, Woad will not talk in headlines. Like the American, Woad’s swing can be unorthodox. She has something in common with another icon of this sport; Woad is managed by the same agency as Tiger Woods.
Woad serves as the latest example of how the American college circuit prepares golfers for life as a professional. The Surrey athlete excelled at Florida State University amid a rise to the summit of the amateur world ranking. “She’s been in a lot of those kind of tougher moments,” Ko added. “Obviously it’s different than being an amateur and playing collegiate golf to as a pro, but I think she’s been there and done really well in those pressure conditions no matter what kind of environment she’s been in. So I think there’s a little bit more experience under her belt than what people probably give her credit for.

“When I’ve seen the coverage or how she composes herself, she doesn’t seem like she rushes into things or gets like overly emotional. I’m sure that’s going to help her with that transition as well.”
Ko’s analysis is valid. Woad’s greatest strength is appearing totally unflustered when placed in tricky golfing scenarios. Her display of front-running at Dundonald Links on Sunday made a mockery of supposed rookie status. In Ireland, she won by half a dozen shots.
after newsletter promotion
“Absolutely amazing,” said the world No 1, Nelly Korda, in adding to the chorus of commendation for Woad. “I was very impressed with her composure, her process [in Scotland]. When it comes to her shot routine, especially under pressure and in the heat of the moment, sometimes people seem to fidget and kind of doubt themselves but she stuck to it, she stuck to her process every single time. I think one of the main things that I noticed is how mature she is for her age and how comfortable she was in the heat of the moment.
“You can see that she’s put a ton of hours in. Her putting is very solid, her game’s solid, she hits it pretty far off the tee. She grew up in this kind of weather too, so I feel like she’s kind of comfortable.” It would seem a shock if Woad is not in Porthcawl contention.
The R&A has increased the prize fund for this major, by $250,000 to $9.75m, with the winner collecting $1.4m. The male equivalent had its purse frozen for 2025. The scale of growth in the Women’s Open is shown by the fact golfers were competing for $3.25m as recently as 2018. It was confirmed on Wednesday that the 2027 edition of the tournament will take place at Royal St George’s, which has staged the men’s Open 15 times.
A rare stop for elite golf in Wales has seen players assess the local culture. “When I drove from Scotland after I missed the cut last week, I saw all the road signs,” said Grace Kim. “It went from like English to, not in a rude way, like gibberish.” Ouch.