, who won the pre-Masters era Career Grand Slam in 1930, is the only golfer to win four majors in the same year. won the Career Grand Slam three times. won the Career Grand Slam three times. won a Career Grand Slam. won a Career Grand Slam. won a Career Grand Slam. won a Career Grand Slam. The Grand Slam in men's golf is an unofficial term for winning all four
major championships in the same year. In the modern era, the Grand Slam requires victories in four tournaments in a single calendar year (listed in current playing order): •
Masters Tournament, held the week ending on the 2nd Sunday in April – hosted as an invitational by and played at
Augusta National Golf Club •
PGA Championship (also known as the "United States PGA Championship" or "USPGA"), held the week ending on the 3rd Sunday in May, one week before
Memorial Day weekend – hosted by the
PGA of America and played at various locations in the United States. Prior to 2019, it was held in mid-August, three weeks before
Labor Day weekend. •
U.S. Open, held the week ending on the 3rd Sunday or
Father's Day in June – hosted by the
USGA and played at various locations in the United States. •
The Open Championship ("The Open", sometimes called "the British Open" outside the UK), held the week containing the 3rd Friday in July – hosted by
The R&A and always played on a
links course at one of several predetermined locations in the United Kingdom on a rota basis. Prior to the creation of the Masters Tournament, the national amateur championships of the U.S. and the UK were considered major championships. During that earlier era, the Grand Slam comprised consecutive victories at the
U.S. Amateur,
The Amateur Championship (British Amateur) along with the U.S. Open and the Open Championship. The term
Grand Slam was first applied to
Bobby Jones' achievement of winning the four major golf events of
1930 open to amateurs:
The Open Championship (containing pros and amateurs), the
U.S. Open (containing pros and amateurs), the
U.S. Amateur (containing amateurs only), and the
British Amateur (containing amateurs only). When Jones won all four, the sports world searched for ways to capture the magnitude of his accomplishment. Up to that time, there was no term for such a feat because no one had thought it possible. The
Atlanta Journals O.B. Keeler dubbed it the "Grand Slam," borrowing a
bridge term. George Trevor of the
New York Sun wrote that Jones had "stormed the impregnable quadrilateral of golf." Keeler would later write the words that would forever be linked to one of the greatest individual accomplishments in the history of sports: During this era, a professional Grand Slam was also talked about, comprising the two open major championships, along with the PGA Championship and the three next biggest tournaments: the
Canadian Open,
Western Open and
Metropolitan Open. Completing this professional grand slam during their career was achieved by
Tommy Armour and
Walter Hagen, who both completed it in 1931. The modern definition of four majors open to pros and amateurs could not be applied until at least
1934, when the Masters was founded, and still carried little weight in
1953 when
Ben Hogan won the
Masters,
U.S. Open, and
Open Championship. That year, it was impossible to win all four because the
PGA Championship preceded and overlapped with the Open Championship; the PGA's 36-hole match play semifinals and finals near
Detroit were the same days as the mandatory 36-hole qualifier at
Carnoustie in
Scotland for the Open Championship; the only way to compete in both events was to lose an early match at the PGA. Hogan is the only player to have won the Masters, U.S. Open, and Open Championship in the same calendar year. In 1960, Arnold Palmer won the
Masters in April and
U.S.Open in June. According to his autobiography, ''A Golfer's Life'', he and his friend Bob Drum (of the
Pittsburgh Press), while on the trans-Atlantic flight to
The Open Championship at
St Andrews, came up with the idea that adding it and the
PGA Championship titles that July would constitute a modern Grand Slam. Drum spread the notion among the gathered media and it caught on. However, a newspaper article on 12 April 1960 titled "Biggest Grand Slam May Be Palmer Goal" stated:
Two years earlier, the PGA had changed to
stroke play, and it started to be held two weeks after the Open Championship in 1960. Scheduling problems continued through the 1960s because the last two majors were held in successive weeks in July on five occasions. The PGA was played in August in
1965 but returned to July for the next three. With the formation of the Tournament Players Division in late 1968, now the
PGA Tour, the PGA Championship moved to August in
1969 and, except for the
1971 edition, held in late February to avoid the summer heat of
Florida, continued to be held during that month until
2018. Since
2019 it is held in May.
Tiger Woods came closest to winning a modern Grand Slam by holding all four major titles at the same time. He won all four major championships consecutively – the
U.S. Open,
Open Championship, and
PGA Championship in
2000, and the
2001 Masters – but not in the same calendar year. This has been called the
Tiger Slam. In fact, even before Woods accomplished this, there was much debate over the definition of "Grand Slam."
Fred Couples said, "I don't know how I can put it more simply... if he wins all four, it's a Slam." Only six golfers have won all four of golf's modern majors at any time during their careers, an achievement which is often referred to as a
Career Grand Slam:
Gene Sarazen,
Ben Hogan,
Gary Player,
Jack Nicklaus,
Tiger Woods, and
Rory McIlroy. Woods and Nicklaus have won each of the four majors at least three times. The term also refers to a former tour tournament, the
PGA Grand Slam of Golf, an annual off-season tournament, that was cancelled after the 2014 tournament, contested by the winners of the four major championships.
Career Grand Slam Original Grand Slam Early era professional Grand Slam Years in
bold denotes win that completed the career Grand Slam.
Modern era Grand Slam Years in
bold denotes win that completed the career Grand Slam.
Number denotes which of multiple Grand slams was completed by winning this event.
Players in search of the modern era career Grand Slam Several players in the modern era have been one major championship short of completing the career grand slam, having never won (those in italics remain active as of 2025): • Masters Tournament:
Lee Trevino (6 major championships) • PGA Championship:
Arnold Palmer (7),
Tom Watson (8),
Jordan Spieth (3) • U.S. Open:
Sam Snead (7),
Phil Mickelson (6),
Scottie Scheffler (4) • The Open:
Byron Nelson (5),
Raymond Floyd (4)
Tommy Armour (3),
Jim Barnes (4) and
Walter Hagen (11) also won three of the four but were in the twilight of their careers when the Masters Tournament was founded and would not have been expected to win at that time. ==Women's golf==