Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Emma Grechi
French professional golfer (born 1999) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Emma Grechi (born 19 January 1998) is a French professional golfer and Ladies European Tour player.[1]
Remove ads
Early life and amateur career
Grechi is from Bordeaux and competed in tennis and judo before discovering golf at 10 years old, thanks to her grandmother. She was educated at Lycée Saint-Joseph-de-Tivoli in Bordeaux, where she obtained a baccalaureate of Management Sciences and Technologies.[1]
In 2014, she was runner-up at the Championnat de France des Jeunes Minimes (U16) behind Agathe Laisné, and at the Championnat de France - Coupe Gaveau behind Anais Meyssonnier. She won the 2015 Championnat de France Cadet, and was runner-up at the same event in 2016.[2]
Grechi represented France in the 2016 European Girls' Team Championship and 2017 European Ladies' Team Championship.[2]
Remove ads
Professional career
Grechi turned professional in 2017 and joined the LET Access Series. In 2019, she won the Belfius Ladies Open, and was runner-up at the Bossey Ladies Championship behind Hayley Davis. 2019 also became her rookie year on the Ladies European Tour (LET), where she played in six tournaments with a best finish of T12 at the dual-ranked Jabra Ladies Open.[1]
In 2021, she finished the season 40th on the LET Order of Merit, after top-ten finishes at the Gant Ladies Open (T9) and the VP Bank Swiss Ladies Open (T7). In 2022, she again finished 40th after recording top-5 finishes at the Magical Kenya Ladies Open and Aramco Team Series – Sotogrande. She was runner-up in the 2023 Aramco Team Series – Florida team event alongside Casandra Alexander and Gabriella Cowley.[1]
In 2024, she made an albatross at the Investec South African Women's Open to win a Renault car, and a hole-in-one at the Aramco Team Series – Shenzhen.[3][4] She held the co-lead after the first day of the Lacoste Ladies Open de France.[5]
Grechi came through final qualifying at Crail Golfing Society to earn a place at the 2024 Women's British Open at Old Course at St Andrews, where she made the cut.[6][7]
Remove ads
Amateur wins
- 2015 Grand Prix de Pau, Championnat de France Cadet
- 2016 Grand Prix de Bordeaux-Lac, Open du Bassin D'Arcachon, Grand Prix du Medoc
Source:[2]
Professional wins (1)
LET Access Series wins (1)
Results in LPGA majors
Did not play
CUT = missed the half-way cut
"T" = tied
Team appearances
Amateur
- European Girls' Team Championship (representing France): 2016
- European Ladies' Team Championship (representing France): 2017
Source:[2]
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads