The LPGA announced a new Las Vegas tournament carrying a $4 million purse, partnering with Golf Saudi to stage the Aramco Championship at Shadow Creek beginning in 2026. The deal marks new commissioner Katie Lahey's first major calendar addition and extends Saudi Arabia's footprint in women's professional golf to three U.S.-based events, following existing stops in Jeddah and Portland.
The tournament slots into late March, positioned between the Ford Championship and the Chevron Championship. Shadow Creek, the Tom Fazio design previously restricted to high-roller play, will host a 120-player field. Prize distribution mirrors the tour's elevated-purse model: $600,000 to the winner, $363,000 for second, $263,000 for third. The LPGA now carries six tournaments with purses at or above $4 million, up from two in 2019.
The move matters because it demonstrates Saudi Arabia's willingness to deploy sports capital into women's properties at scale, not just men's tours. Golf Saudi, the commercial arm of the Saudi Golf Federation, already title-sponsors the Aramco Team Series and backs the Portland Classic through a regional partnership. This Vegas event consolidates that presence into a single, high-visibility U.S. market during a ratings-friendly spring window. Lahey, who took the commissioner role in November after two decades at the PGA Tour, inherits a tour where Middle Eastern backing now represents roughly 15% of total prize money, a figure that will climb if Golf Saudi exercises rumored options on additional events.
For team operators and sponsors, the implications are straightforward: the LPGA's purse inflation is being funded by a narrow set of backers with specific geopolitical objectives, and that capital comes with expectations around visibility, broadcast windows, and player obligations. The tour's average purse sat at $2.2 million in 2023; it will approach $2.7 million in 2026 with this addition. That delta is almost entirely attributable to Saudi and private-equity-backed events. Existing sponsors—Cognizant, Kroger, Ford—are now competing for attention in a calendar where the richest tournaments are funded by entities with marketing budgets an order of magnitude larger.
Player agents are watching the pro-am structure. Shadow Creek's limited tee-sheet history means corporate hospitality inventory is undefined, but sources expect Golf Saudi to replicate the Portland model: invitation-only pro-ams with Middle Eastern executives, U.S. finance allocators, and Vegas casino operators. That puts top-10 players in rooms with the people who decide where sovereign wealth flows next. One agent, speaking on background, noted that three of his clients have received consulting offers from Gulf-based sports ventures in the past 18 months; none had prior Middle Eastern commercial relationships before playing Saudi-backed events.
Watch for coordinator hires in the next 60 days—Lahey needs a Vegas-based operations lead who can manage Shadow Creek's ownership group and Golf Saudi's tournament expectations simultaneously. Also watch the broadcast window: if NBC slots this opposite a PGA Tour event, it signals the network views LPGA purse growth as genuine ratings leverage. If it lands on Golf Channel mid-afternoon, the tour is still fighting for primetime respect despite the money.
The Portland Classic's title sponsor renews in Q4 2025. If Golf Saudi consolidates that deal into the Vegas event and walks from Oregon, the LPGA loses a Pacific Northwest date it has held since 1972. That is the trade: bigger checks, narrower geography, and a calendar increasingly shaped by entities who view golf as diplomatic infrastructure, not sports entertainment.