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Hannah Green Opens Up About Husband Caddying During HSBC Title Push

Mar 1, 2026, 5:36 AM CUT

As the final round approaches in Singapore, roles inside the ropes look different for Hannah Green. 

Six-time LPGA Tour winner is in contention at the 2026 HSBC Women's World Championship, and this time her husband, Jarryd Felton, is the one carrying the bag as she pushes for another title.

Green took an extended break in December 2025 and stepped away from the game before the new season. 

During that break, she spent time caddying for her husband, Jarryd Felton, the Australian professional golfer, while he competed. Now, the roles have reversed. Felton carried the bag for her in Thailand last week and continues to do so in Singapore.

Shared via Beth Ann Nichols on X on Saturday, Green offered insight into what it was like having her husband on the bag, saying: 

“I think it’s been good so far because obviously I’ve been playing well. I think it’d be harder if I wasn’t playing well, but we don’t really talk too much about golf. Honestly, he’ll probably be just as nervous as I will be. I try to get distracted.”

Felton, born in 1995, plays primarily on the PGA Tour of Australasia. He turned professional in October 2015 and has won the NSW PGA Championship (2015), NZ PGA Championship (2017), WA PGA Championship (2020), and TPS Sydney (2022).

Jarryd Felton and Hannah Green share a relationship that began long before their professional careers took shape. They met as teenagers and dated for more than five years before Felton proposed on May 9, 2022.

The couple married on January 19, 2024, at Aravina Estate in Western Australia. Since then, their partnership has continued both at home and on tour.

After explaining how she manages nerves, the 2024 BMW Ladies Championship winner detailed how she plans to handle the evening and preparation for the final round.

Hannah Green Balances Final-Round Lead With Limited Golf Talk in Singapore

As Hannah Green outlined her approach for the night, she made it clear that keeping her routine simple remains the priority, using distraction and limited golf discussion as her way to stay calm under pressure.

“Tonight I’ll probably have dinner with other players and try to keep my mind off it. I don’t think we’ll talk much about tomorrow. We’ll go [Green and her husband] through the pin positions, see where they are, and what adjustments we might make. But not too much golf chat.”

A former champion of this event, Green, leads the 2026 HSBC Women's World Championship in Singapore. She is 12-under par and playing her fourth round at Sentosa Golf Club on the Tanjong Course.

At this stage, she holds a two-shot lead over Minjee Lee and Angel Yin, who are tied at 10-under.

Read more at Daily Club Golf!

Written by

Aditi Singh

Edited by

Joyita Das

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