Hometown/Resides: Bournemouth, England
Birthdate: April 12, 1996; currently 22 years, 3 months and 24 days
Qualified for LPGA Tour: Tied for T7 at the 2017 LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament
Turned Professional/Rookie Year: 2014/2018
VICTORIES
With her win, Hall becomes a Rolex First-Time Winner on the LPGA Tour
RACE TO THE CME GLOBE
With her win, Hall earns 625 points and is projected to move from 68th to 22nd in the Race to the CME Globe with 1,040 points
ROLEX ANNIKA MAJOR AWARD
With her win, Hall earns 60 points and becomes eligible to win the award at the end of the season
MONEY
With her win, Hall earns $490,000; she has earned $648,650 this season and for her career
PREVIOUS RICOH WOMEN’S BRITISH OPEN RESULTS
2017 – T3; 2016 – CUT; 2015 – CUT; 2014 – T29; 2013 – T42
2018 IN A NUTSHELL ON THE LPGA
15 events played, 11 cuts made, $648,650, one victory, two additional top-20 finishes
OF NOTE
Hall is the fourth-youngest winner of the Ricoh Women’s British Open, behind Jiyai Shin (20/3/6), Ariya Jutanugarn (20/8/8) and Yani Tseng (21/6/9)
She earns 300 points toward the Louise Suggs Rolex Rookie of the Year Award and is projected to move into second in those standings behind Jin Young Ko, who leads with 889 points but did not make the cut
Hall is the seventh Rolex First-Time Winner of 2018, joining Jin Young Ko, Pernilla Lindberg, Moriya Jutanugarn, Annie Park, Nasa Hataoka and Thidapa Suwannapura
She is the LPGA Tour’s first English winner since Charley Hull at the 2016 CME Group Tour Championship
She is the first English major winner since Karen Stupples won the 2004 Ricoh Women’s British Open and the fourth overall, along with Laura Davies (four majors), Alison Nicholas (one major) and Stupples (one major)
She is the fifth European major winner of the last decade, joining Pernilla Lindberg (Sweden), Anna Nordqvist (Sweden), Suzann Pettersen (Norway) and Catriona Matthew (Scotland)
Hall represented Europe at the 2017 Solheim Cup, where she went 2-3-0
She will represent England at the 2018 UL International Crown
She is the first person in history to win the Girls' British Open Amateur, Ladies' British Open Amateur and Ricoh Women’s British Open
This is the third consecutive year that an LPGA rookie has earned a major title; In Gee Chun won the 2016 Evian Championship, while Sung Hyun Park won the 2017 U.S. Women’s Open