Some records in sports can’t be touched.
Call me when someone reaches Wayne Gretzky’s 1,963 NHL assists or Cy Young’s 749 complete games pitched or Wilt Chamberlain’s 50.4 points per game in the NBA.
Yeah, I don’t think any of those are being matched unless those sports have dramatic rules changes.
Finding untouchable accomplishments is a little harder in golf, a game where longevity and age don’t have the same power as more physical sports. Regardless, there are still some marks that will take a herculean effort to eclipse.
As you might guess, Tiger Woods factors in heavily to these records. In some cases, he tied a previous record. You might be asking how a record could be unbreakable if it was already broken. My answer is that Woods is the greatest golfer in history, so I think it’s fair to wonder if some his accomplishments will ever be replicated. In a lot of cases, I highly doubt they will.
Also, there are some records in here that were equaled at some point but are now too difficult to be matched because the modern game has more depth, parity, etc.
One other note: Infamous records—like the highest score shot on a hole or in a tournament—always have a better chance to be equaled so I’ve left those off the list. Golf is hard.
I’ve also left off some of the very early records such as Young Tom Morris winning four Open Championships or being the youngest winner (17 years old) of that event. It feels like some of the 19th-Century records should have their own category entirely.
Here are the top 10 golf records that are the most unbreakable.
10. Tiger Woods and Bobby Jones holding all four majors at once
It seems extremely unlikely—but still somewhat within the realm of possibility—for a player to carry all four major titles at once.
Bobby Jones won all four majors in 1930 although they weren’t the same four majors we know today (the Masters didn’t exist yet). And Woods won the last three majors of 2000 and the first major of 2001 to complete the Tiger Slam.
While some will point to Jordan Spieth in 2015 winning the first two majors and coming close in the final two majors that year, it still took a transcendent run of golf to even threaten the Grand Slam.
It’s been hard enough for a player to win two majors in the same year, which we saw with Xander Schauffele in 2024 (prior to that, it hadn’t been since Brooks Koepka in 2018). Scottie Scheffler had one of the best golf seasons of the 21st century and still only captured one major this year.
Ultimately, I think it’s too difficult for one player to separate nowadays. That Spieth run came at a time before golf’s depth reached unprecedented levels.
Is it the most unbreakable? No, but I feel good that this will stand the rest of my life.
9. Masters and Open Championship win leaders
Jack Nicklaus has six Masters titles. Harry Vardon won six Open Championships.
I think these are safe. Considering Woods is at the end of his career, the next closest active player who has any remote chance at equaling these marks would be Scottie Scheffler (two Masters titles) and a long line of one-time Open Championship winners.
Koepka has a decent shot at the PGA Championship and U.S. Open records, being only two back of both. For the other two majors, it’s tough imagine anyone compiling enough victories to match Nicklaus or Vardon.
8. Kathy Whitworth winning 88 LPGA Tour events
You can make a good case for this to be higher on the list but I’m erring on the side of caution because women’s golf is more susceptible to dominating forces than the men’s game.
Having said that, Whitworth’s 88 LPGA titles is a pretty ridiculous stat. No active player has more than 22 (Lydia Ko) and I think it’s fair to say a lot of these women don’t have a desire to play at a high level for three decades like Whitworth did. Her first victory came in 1962 and her last was in 1985—a 23-year span.
In 2023, only two players 30 or older won on the LPGA Tour. The longevity is just not there like it used to be and many women retire early to have children or do something other than golf.
Whitworth played in a different era. I don’t think anyone today can hit 88 wins.
7. Tiger Woods making 142 consecutive cuts
I was tempted to put this record higher on the list. If you would have asked me 10 years ago, it might have been No. 1 for me.
This record is almost certainly unbreakable given that no 21st-Century golfer has reached half of the 142 consecutive made cuts that Woods once accomplished. This record, which was set in 2005, has long been cited as one of golf’s untouchable marks.
However, I’m slightly hesitant for two reasons:
Xander Schauffele is on a string of 55 consecutive made cuts, the best run in 40 years outside of Woods. Pro golf has gone heavily in the direction of limited-field, no-cut events.The majors will always have cuts (I hope) but it’s possible the majority of other events will be no-cut affairs.
If that is the case, I’m putting an asterisk on any record breaker who somehow reaches 142 made cuts in a row. This stat should be made cuts, not including limited-field events.
Schauffele will still need to make the cut at every event for another four seasons or so—which is a ton of golf—but it’s somewhat possible.
6. Tiger Woods holding the No. 1 ranking for 683 weeks
Consider that Woods held the top spot in the Official World Golf Ranking for a total of 683 weeks (more than 13 years) while second place in that race is Greg Norman at “only” 331 weeks (about six and a half years).
The active golfer list for the top spot is Dustin Johnson (135), Rory McIlroy (122) and Scottie Scheffler (107). Scheffler, the current top dog, would need to hold onto the top spot every week until 2035—when he would be 39 years old—to eclipse Woods.
This might seem somewhat feasible on paper but history would tell us that holding the top spot in the world is far more elusive than it seems. Golf is undefeated.
Woods has held the top spot for chunks of 281 and 264 weeks (both more than five-year stretches). The next longest stretch of time holding the top spot is Norman at 96 weeks although Scheffler is currently working on 72 consecutive weeks at No. 1.
Scheffler’s margin of error to reach Woods is almost zero. All it would take is an injury, another player getting hot or Scheffler having a slight dip in play for this not to happen.
5. Jack Nicklaus finishing top 3 in a major 46 times
There are a lot of Nicklaus stats to choose from but I think this one is the most staggering.
For the entire decade of the 1970s, Nicklaus finished in the top 10 for 35 of the 40 majors. Woah! Yeah, he was dominant.
Nicklaus, famously, has more runner-up finishes (19) than major victories (18). But he also has another nine third-place finishes, giving him 46 top-three major results.
It’s pretty humbling that Woods, who is in second place for this stat, “only” has 26 top-three major finishes. Phil Mickelson played forever and got to 24. McIlroy only has 12. Koepka has nine.
It’s just too much for a modern player to reach Nicklaus here.
4. Tiger Woods winning a major by 15 strokes
What we saw in the 2000 U.S. Open will never be seen again.
Woods shot 12-under to win by 15 shots—with a triple bogey in the third round—for what is arguably the greatest performance in a single tournament the game has ever seen.
Has any modern golfer come close? Not really. McIlroy won two majors by eight strokes, a mark equaled by Martin Kaymer in the 2014 U.S. Open.
I think this one is safe for as long as golf is played. There is too much parity in the game to see someone separate like that.
3. Tiger Woods and Sam Snead capturing 82 PGA Tour victories
You could make a compelling case that this is the most unbreakable record on the list.
No active golfer under the age of 50 has anywhere close to half the number of wins that Woods and Snead compiled. McIlroy (26) and Johnson (24) are the only players in the top 50 of all-time Tour wins and Johnson is at the end of his career (and he plays on LIV).
It’s completely impossible that a modern golfer will get to 82 victories. Some of the top guys aren’t even on the Tour at this point and there is just too much depth of competition for someone to amass that many wins.
2. Jack Nicklaus winning 18 major championships
This is as straightforward as it gets for me. I just don’t think anyone will ever challenge 18 majors.
It took Woods—arguably the best golfer of all-time—to reach 15 major titles during a period of time when the U.S. Ryder Cup team had Brett Wetterich, J.J. Henry and Vaughn Taylor. And given his recent play and age, it’s safe to say Woods won’t be challenging the Nicklaus mark of 18 major wins.
The next player on the active list is Mickelson at six majors, but Lefty is at the end of his career. Koepka (five) and McIlroy (four) are among the multi-major winners still in the meat of their careers but the depth of competition—and the insane amount of money available—in the modern game is too great for anyone to reach 18 majors.
1. Byron Nelson winning 11 consecutive PGA Tour victories
Iron Byron won 11 straight Tour events in 1945. Nobody has ever gotten closer than seven, which was Woods in 2006-2007. Woods also had a run of six straight victories (1999-2000), matching Ben Hogan (1948).
While not the most impressive accomplishment on this list, I do think it’s the most unlikely to replicated.
Annika Sorenstam, Nancy Lopez and Nelly Korda have all won five events in a row on the LPGA Tour but it’s been ages since a Tour player not named Woods has threatened more than five wins in a row.
It’s ultimately too difficult for any modern golfer to reach Nelson’s record which happened during World War II when a lot of top golfers were serving in the war.
I’ll also throw in a bonus record here: Nelson won 18 times in 1945, a mark that can never be equaled. Modern golfers barely even play 18 times per year.
Do you agree with this list? What other records will never be reached?
Let me know below in the comments.
Top Photo Caption: Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus set records that will never be broken. (GETTY IMAGES/Scott Halleran)
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