In 1946,
Prince Bertil, Duke of Halland became Chairman of the SGF.
Sven Tumba was instrumental in promoting the game as a healthy activity for the masses, and in 1968 he organized exhibition matches at Lidingö Golf Club and
Falsterbo Golf Club featuring
Arnold Palmer, popularizing the sport further. By 1970 there were 110 courses. The first notable Swedish professional golfers emerged in the 1970s, with
Gunnar Mueller the first to play all four rounds in a
major at the
1973 Open Championship.
Kärstin Ehrnlund joined the
Ladies European Tour in its inaugural season in
1979, and secured the first Swedish victory on the tour in
1980. In 1982,
Charlotte Montgomery became the first to qualify as a member on one of the main U.S.-based golf tours when she succeeded at the
LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament, soon followed by
Pia Nilsson, who would later captain the European
1998 Solheim Cup team. Golf boomed in the 1980s, and the number of courses almost doubled in a single decade to 271. In 1984, the
Swedish Golf Tour was established, and a women's tour followed two years later. Corporate sponsorship of professionals emerged, and Team Saab supported by
Saab Automobile, saw
Ove Sellberg,
Magnus Persson and
Krister Kinell turn professionals in 1982 and be competitive on the
European Tour, where the first victory came in
1986.
Liselotte Neumann became the first LPGA Tour winner and
major champion when she won the
1988 U.S. Women's Open. In 1997,
Gabriel Hjertstedt became the first to win on the PGA Tour and two years later the first two-time winner.
Jesper Parnevik became the first three-time winner, with a total of five PGA Tour-titles 1997–2001. Between 1995 and 2005
Annika Sörenstam was a dominant on the LPGA Tour, with a career record of 72 LPGA Tour titles, including 10 major victories. By the time
Anna Nordqvist won her third major in 2021, she and her compatriots had the third most
LPGA major championship titles of any nation, behind only the United States and South Korea. The first Swedish
men's major victory came at the
2016 Open Championship through
Henrik Stenson, after Parnevik,
Niclas Fasth and
Jonas Blixt had all recorded runner-up finishes. ==Courses==