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Keita Nakajima | |||||||||
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![]() Nakajima in 2021 | |||||||||
Personal information | |||||||||
Born | Saitama, Japan | 24 June 2000||||||||
Height | 5 ft 10 in (178 cm) | ||||||||
Weight | 160 lb (73 kg) | ||||||||
Sporting nationality | ![]() | ||||||||
Career | |||||||||
College | Nippon Sport Science University | ||||||||
Turned professional | 2022 | ||||||||
Current tour(s) | European Tour Japan Golf Tour Korn Ferry Tour | ||||||||
Professional wins | 5 | ||||||||
Highest ranking | 75 (14 April 2024)[1] (as of 20 April 2025) | ||||||||
Number of wins by tour | |||||||||
European Tour | 1 | ||||||||
Japan Golf Tour | 4 | ||||||||
Best results in major championships | |||||||||
Masters Tournament | CUT: 2022 | ||||||||
PGA Championship | CUT: 2024 | ||||||||
U.S. Open | CUT: 2022 | ||||||||
The Open Championship | CUT: 2022, 2023, 2024 | ||||||||
Achievements and awards | |||||||||
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Keita Nakajima (Japanese: 中島啓太, born 24 June 2000) is a Japanese professional golfer. He had an exceptionally successful amateur career and was number 1 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking for a record 87 weeks. He also won the Panasonic Open on the Japan Golf Tour while still an amateur.[2][3]
Nakajima started playing golf at six and had a successful amateur career, winning the 2018 Australian Amateur and the 2021 Japan Amateur Championship, after finishing runner-up at the event in 2015, 2017 and 2019. He was runner-up at the 2017 Duke of York Young Champions Trophy in England and the 2019 Australian Master of the Amateurs. In 2018, he was runner-up at the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship, before winning the event in 2021 in a playoff with Hong Kong's Taichi Kho. Nakajima became the third Japanese champion of the tournament, joining Hideki Matsuyama and Takumi Kanaya.[4]
He played in a number of representative matches, including the 2017 Nomura Cup, the 2022 Eisenhower Trophy and the 2019 Arnold Palmer Cup, which the international team won 33½–26½ over the American team. Nakajima won both the individual and team gold medals at the 2018 Asian Games. He was world ranked number 1 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking for a record 87 weeks between 2020 and 2022, surpassing Jon Rahm's previous record of 60 weeks.[4] He won the Mark H. McCormack Medal for 2021 and 2022, the first two-time recipient.[5]
While still an amateur, Nakajima played in a number of professional tournaments.[6] In 2021, he was runner-up at the Token Homemate Cup, a stroke behind Takumi Kanaya, and won the Panasonic Open in a playoff. After he made the cut at the 2022 Sony Open in Hawaii, he rose to 188th in the Official World Golf Rankings.[7]
Nakajima turned professional in the fall of 2022 and made his professional PGA Tour debut at the 2022 Zozo Championship, where he finished T12.[8]
In 2023, Nakajima won three times on the Japan Golf Tour in his rookie season. He topped the money list,[9] as well as claiming Most Valuable Player and Rookie of the Year honours.[10]
In March 2024, Nakajima claimed his first victory on the European Tour, winning the Hero Indian Open wire-to-wire by four shots.[11]
Source:[12]
No. | Date | Tournament | Winning score | Margin of victory |
Runners-up |
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1 | 31 Mar 2024 | Hero Indian Open1 | −17 (65-65-68-73=271) | 4 strokes | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
1Co-sanctioned by the Professional Golf Tour of India
No. | Date | Tournament | Winning score | Margin of victory |
Runner-up |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 26 Sep 2021 | Panasonic Open (as an amateur) |
−18 (69-68-65-68=270) | Playoff | ![]() |
2 | 11 Jun 2023 | ASO Iizuka Challenged Golf Tournament | −29 (67-64-63-65=259) | Playoff | ![]() |
3 | 6 Aug 2023 | Yokohama Minato Championship | −13 (69-69-67-66=271) | 1 stroke | ![]() |
4 | 5 Nov 2023 | Mynavi ABC Championship | −24 (63-69-66-66=264) | 3 strokes | ![]() |
Japan Golf Tour playoff record (2–1)
No. | Year | Tournament | Opponent | Result |
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1 | 2021 | Panasonic Open (as an amateur) |
![]() |
Won with par on first extra hole |
2 | 2023 | Gateway to The Open Mizuno Open | ![]() |
Lost to birdie on third extra hole |
3 | 2023 | ASO Iizuka Challenged Golf Tournament | ![]() |
Won with birdie on second extra hole |
Tournament | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 |
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Masters Tournament | CUT | ||
PGA Championship | CUT | ||
U.S. Open | CUT | ||
The Open Championship | CUT | CUT | CUT |
CUT = missed the halfway cut
Amateur