Aki Iwai Shoots Bogey-Free 63 for Two-Shot Lead at Amundi Evian Championship

Aki Iwai Shoots Bogey-Free 63 for Two-Shot Lead at Amundi Evian Championship

Japan’s Aki Iwai posted the lowest opening round at Evian since 2022, while France’s Perrine Delacour recorded her best major score on home soil to sit two back.

Akie Iwai of Japan lines up a putt during the first round of The Amundi Evian Championship 2026 at Evian Resort Golf Club

Aki Iwai fired a bogey-free 63 to take a two-shot lead after the opening round of the 2026 Amundi Evian Championship at Evian Resort Golf Club in France. The 24-year-old Japanese player’s eight-under-par effort was the lowest first-round score at the tournament since Ayaka Furue opened with the same number in 2022.

Iwai, who has one LPGA Tour victory, made her first birdie at the fifth before adding two more on seven and nine. She added consecutive birdies on 11 and 12, another pair on 15 and 16, and a closing birdie at 18.

“I was able to have a good focus on my golf and stay committed. I prepared a lot around the green with chipping and putting. I was driving well, but honestly everything was good,” Iwai said. “I like this course, it’s similar to a course in Japan.”

Akie Iwai of Japan lines up a putt during the first round of The Amundi Evian Championship 2026 at Evian Resort Golf Club
Akie Iwai (Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

Delacour Posts Career-Best Major Round at Home

France’s Perrine Delacour sits alone in second place after a 65, the lowest round she has posted in a major championship. The two-time LET winner started on the back nine, making birdie at 10, eagle at 15, and back-to-back birdies on 17 and 18 to turn in four-under.

She dropped shots at the fifth and eighth but responded with birdies on six, seven, and 18 to finish on six-under with her parents watching from the gallery.

“It’s for sure a lot of fun playing in France, but playing great in France is even better,” Delacour said. “I almost had a hole-in-one on 16, which I’m kind of disappointed with because if I made a hole-in-one this week during tournament week I cut the hair of my caddie.”

Hull Recovers From Slow Start

Five players share third place on five-under: England’s Charley Hull, Sweden’s Maja Stark, Korea’s Haeran Ryu and Jin Hee Im, and Japan’s Mao Saigo.

World number five Hull opened with bogeys on the first and sixth holes but rallied with birdies on seven, eight, 13, 15, and 16 before holing an eagle putt on 18 for a round of 66.

“You have to be able to hit and create shots on slopes where you could have 127 yards and on a normal golf course, it would be an easy shot, but there the lie is crazy below your feet,” Hull said. “You just have to understand the slopes. My home golf course I grew up on, Kettering, that was always very hilly and there was never a flat shot.”

Stark went bogey-free in her 66, rolling in birdies on 14, 15, 16, five, and nine. “Every tee shot here freaks me out. I just thought we have to go for it, so it was pretty stress-free,” Stark said. “I’m very happy they’re making it harder and firmer.”

English Duo in Contention

Seven players are one shot further back on four-under, including England’s Cara Gainer and Lottie Woad, who both shot 67.

Gainer kept it clean all day. “I just played very solid, kept it in play which is the most important thing on this golf course,” she said.

Woad was five-under at one stage before dropping shots on the front nine, then closed with an eagle to return to four-under. “It was a nice finish with the eagle to get it back,” she said.

Round two begins at 7 a.m. local time on Friday, with the field cut to the top 65 players and ties at the end of the day.

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Pos.PlayerTo ParR1
1Aki Iwai (JPN)-863
2Perrine Delacour (FRA)-665
3Charley Hull (ENG)-566
3Maja Stark (SWE)-566
3Haeran Ryu (KOR)-566
3Jin Hee Im (KOR)-566
3Mao Saigo (JPN)-566
8Jing Yan (USA)-467
8Brooke M Henderson (CAN)-467
8Cara Gainer (ENG)-467
8Erika Hara (JPN)-467
8Lottie Woad (ENG)-467
8Ruoning Yin (CHN)-467
8Minji Kang (KOR)-467
15Chella Choi (KOR)-368
15Nastasia Nadaud (FRA)-368
15Ayaka Furue (JPN)-368
15Somi Lee (KOR)-368
15Farah O'Keefe (USA) (a)-368
20Anna Nordqvist (SWE)-269
20Jodi Ewart Shadoff (ENG)-269
20Lydia Ko (NZL)-269
20Hyo Joo Kim (KOR)-269
20Ryann O'Toole (USA)-269
20Wei-Ling Hsu (TPE)-269
20Sei Young Kim (KOR)-269
20Alison Lee (USA)-269
20Kajsa Arwefjall (SWE)-269
20Cassie Porter (AUS)-269
20Linn Grant (SWE)-269
20Jennifer Kupcho (USA)-269
20Hinako Shibuno (JPN)-269
20Shannon Tan (SIN)-269
20Ina Yoon (KOR)-269
35Amy Yang (KOR)-170
35Ariya Jutanugarn (THA)-170
35Weiwei Zhang (CHN)-170
35Aditi Ashok (IND)-170
35Karis Davidson (AUS)-170
35Hannah Green (AUS)-170
35Arpichaya Yubol (THA)-170
35Patty Tavatanakit (THA)-170
35Minami Katsu (JPN)-170
35Rose Zhang (USA)-170
35Alexa Pano (USA)-170
35Andrea Lee (USA)-170
35Nataliya Guseva (WHT)-170
35Yuna Nishimura (JPN)-170
35Miyu Yamashita (JPN)-170
35Chizzy Iwai (JPN)-170
35Asterisk Talley (USA) (a)-170
35Auston Kim (USA)-170
35Mary Liu (CHN)-170
35Shuri Sakuma (JPN)-170
35Anna Huang (CAN)-170
35Shiho Kuwaki (JPN)-170
35Lauren Kim (CAN) (a)-170
58Alexandra Forsterling (GER)Par71
58Mi Hyang Lee (KOR)Par71
58Dewi Weber (NED)Par71
58Hye-Jin Choi (KOR)Par71
58Chiara Tamburlini (SUI)Par71
58Megan Khang (USA)Par71
58Lauren Coughlin (USA)Par71
58Leona Maguire (IRL)Par71
58A Lim Kim (KOR)Par71
58Sayaka Takahashi (JPN)Par71
58Melanie Green (USA)Par71
69Nanna Koerstz Madsen (DEN)+172
69Carlota Ciganda (ESP)+172
69Sara Kouskova (CZE)+172
69Brianna Do (USA)+172
69Jeeno Thitikul (THA)+172
69Yuka Saso (JPN)+172
69Esther Henseleit (GER)+172
69Lilia Vu (USA)+172
69Yealimi Noh (USA)+172
69Brooke Matthews (USA)+172
69Allisen Corpuz (USA)+172
69Amanda Doherty (USA)+172
69Youmin Hwang (KOR)+172
69Soo Bin Joo (KOR)+172
69Julia Lopez Ramirez (ESP)+172
69Rio Takeda (JPN)+172
69Yunseo Yang (KOR) (a)+172
69Aphrodite Deng (CAN) (a)+172
87Agathe Laisne (FRA)+273
87Helen Briem (GER)+273
87Isi Gabsa (GER)+273
87Jiwon Jeon (KOR)+273
87Frida Kinhult (SWE)+273
87Gaby Lopez (MEX)+273
87Lindy Duncan (USA)+273
87Robyn Choi (AUS)+273
87Carla Tejedo Mulet (ESP)+273
87Pajaree Anannarukarn (THA)+273
87Leonie Harm (GER)+273
87Casandra Alexander (RSA)+273
87Lauren Walsh (IRL)+273
87Grace Kim (AUS)+273
87Yuri Yoshida (JPN)+273
102Manon De Roey (BEL)+374
102Yu Liu (CHN)+374
102Jin Young Ko (KOR)+374
102Nelly Korda (USA)+374
102Kelsey Bennett (AUS)+374
102Pauline Roussin-Bouchard (FRA)+374
102Lucy Li (USA)+374
102Ana Belac (SLO)+374
102Polly Mack (GER)+374
102Maria Jose Marin (COL) (a)+374
102Hyunjo Yoo (KOR)+374
102Kyo Rim Seo (KOR)+374
102Kiara Romero (USA) (a)+374
115Ashleigh Buhai (RSA)+475
115Jenny Shin (KOR)+475
115Gina Kim (USA)+475
118Pornanong Phatlum (THA)+576
118Celine Boutier (FRA)+576
118Mimi Rhodes (ENG)+576
118Jenny Bae (USA)+576
118Suvichaya Vinijchaitham (THA)+576
123Alice Hewson (ENG)+677
123Minjee Lee (AUS)+677
123Yan Liu (CHN)+677
123Narin An (KOR)+677
123Miranda Wang (CHN)+677
128Gabriela Ruffels (AUS)+778
128Ingrid Lindblad (SWE)+778
128Chanettee Wannasaen (THA)+778
131Nasa Hataoka (JPN)+980
131Esme Hamilton (ENG)+980

Simon Bale

Simon Bale is the publisher of Golf Today. A low single-figure handicap golfer, he was previously a major shareholder and course reviewer for Top100GolfCourses.com for over a decade, starting in 2010. Through this role, he developed extensive knowledge of golf course design and architecture while playing more than 300 courses worldwide.

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Updated: July 9, 2026