The PIF London Championship is back—and so is Georgia Hall. The 2018 Women’s British Open champion will tee it up once again at Centurion Club from August 8-10, as part of the PIF Global Series on the Ladies European Tour.
Hall’s homecoming marks her fifth consecutive appearance at the Hertfordshire venue, where she’s never finished worse than fifth. If consistency is king, Hall’s been wearing the crown since 2021.
This year, she becomes the eighth Solheim Cup player confirmed for the PIF London Championship—an event that’s quietly become one of the crown jewels on the LET calendar.

She joins a star-stacked field that reads like the cast list of a major—minus the stiff blazers and soggy cucumber sandwiches. With finishes of T3, 5th, 2nd, and 4th over the past four years, it’s not hard to see why.
The course suits her game, the fans know her name, and the leaderboard seems to keep her company like an old mate at the pub.
Of course, Hall’s 2025 campaign hasn’t been all roses and birdies. A lone top-10 at the Honda LPGA Thailand has been the highlight so far, and her last win came more than two years ago at the Aramco Saudi Ladies International—where she led from wire to wire like a seasoned getaway driver. Still, there’s no denying the draw: Georgia Hall moves the needle, and Centurion gives her a platform.
She’ll have no shortage of company. Joining her at the PIF London Championship is a formidable lineup, including her longtime pal Charley Hull—England’s swagger queen with two LPGA wins and four LET titles.
The duo headline a strong English contingent that also features Mimi Rhodes, the current Order of Merit leader, and up-and-comer Annabell Fuller.
Spain’s Carlota Ciganda will also make the trip, riding the momentum of a recent LPGA win at the Meijer Classic and a 2024 season finale victory on home soil. An eight-time LET winner and Solheim Cup stalwart, Ciganda’s game is dialled in and due for another big-stage performance.
They’ll be joined by Major champions Celine Boutier (Evian, 2023) and Patty Tavatanakit, who famously took down the Chevron Championship in 2021 and reminded us all of her firepower with a win in Saudi last year.
For fans, it’s a feast. For families, it’s a freebie—at least for the under-16s. Kids go free with a paying adult, which is either a great excuse to introduce your child to the game or a cunning way to avoid babysitting fees for a few hours.
Better still, all ticket sales go straight back into grassroots golf across England. Yes, you read that right—100% reinvestment. Try getting that from your local cinema.
In many ways, the PIF London Championship is more than just another tournament. It’s the flagship European stop of the PIF Global Series—a Golf Saudi-led initiative aiming to transform the landscape of women’s golf.
From Riyadh to Seoul to St Albans, the series is about more than scorecards and trophies. It’s about visibility, opportunity, and rewriting the rules. Or at least making them a little less dusty.
With the Saudi Golf Federation at the helm and a clear mandate for women’s empowerment through sport, this initiative is doing what many said couldn’t be done—giving women’s golf the stage, support, and structure it has long deserved.
So if you’re looking for world-class golf with a side of good conscience, the 2025 PIF London Championship should be on your calendar.
Just don’t be surprised if Georgia Hall adds another top-five—or better—to her Centurion scrapbook.
🎟️ Tickets on sale now: www.pif-london.tixr.com
🌍 Full details and player announcements at: www.pifglobalseries.com