The LPGA Tour announced a partnership with Golf Saudi to launch a Las Vegas tournament carrying a $4 million purse, the second Saudi-sponsored event on the women's circuit after the Aramco Team Series stop. The deal arrives as the tour's new commissioner assumes office following Molly Marcoux Samaan's departure, inheriting a schedule increasingly dependent on petro-state capital to close the gap with PGA Tour prize money.
The Las Vegas event joins the existing Aramco Championship, which concluded this week with the same $4 million purse. Golf Saudi, the promotional arm of Saudi Arabia's golf investments, now underwrites two LPGA stops while Aramco—the state oil company—backs multiple tour events including the Team Series circuit. The Vegas tournament slots into the mid-season calendar, specifics on venue and dates pending final negotiations with Nevada properties. Tour officials confirmed the event carries multi-year commitments but declined to specify contract length or title-sponsorship structure.
The timing matters because LPGA purse growth lags men's tours by structural factors that sponsorship alone cannot solve. The $4 million Vegas figure matches the Aramco Championship but remains a fraction of comparable PGA Tour stops; the Shriners Children's Open, also in Las Vegas, distributed $7 million in 2024. Meanwhile, LET co-sanctioned events pull European players into Saudi stops, complicating LPGA efforts to position as the singular destination for top women's talent. The new commissioner inherits a tour where the top five purses all carry international title sponsors—Chevron, Amundi, KPMG, Cognizant, AIG—and where domestic corporate appetite has not kept pace with player expectations set by Nelly Korda's $4.3 million season earnings in 2024.
Saudi capital fills the gap but introduces dependencies. Golf Saudi's investment follows the kingdom's broader sports strategy: Newcastle United, LIV Golf, Formula One, boxing tentpoles. The LPGA's calculus differs from the PGA Tour's because the women's circuit never commanded the same American broadcast or Fortune 500 anchor deals, making international money less politically fraught and operationally necessary. Sponsors read the signals. When a tour adds a second Saudi event within two years, CMOs at traditional partners start modeling renewal scenarios that assume the kingdom's checks continue. If Aramco or Golf Saudi pull back—whether from domestic budget shifts or geopolitical friction—the LPGA loses 8-10% of total prize money in a single cycle.
The new commissioner's first six months will show whether the Vegas deal is a one-off or the start of a Gulf corridor strategy. Watch for Aramco's 2026 renewal decision, expected by Q3 2025, and whether the Vegas event secures a network broadcast window or remains streaming-only. Also watch coordinator hires under the new commissioner—specifically, whether the tour elevates someone with Middle East sponsor relationships or defaults to a traditional American sports-marketing executive. The distinction tells you which direction the LPGA thinks its next $20 million in annual purse growth comes from.
The Vegas tournament tees off in a calendar slot the tour has struggled to monetize since the Founders Cup ended in 2019. That event carried a $1.5 million purse and lost its sponsor after three years. Golf Saudi is paying nearly three times that, which is either a signal that women's golf economics finally work in secondary markets, or that Saudi Arabia is willing to pay above-market rates for sports-washing inventory. The new commissioner will spend considerable time explaining which one is true.
The takeaway
LPGA's second Saudi-backed event doubles the kingdom's tour exposure and tests whether Gulf capital becomes structural or cyclical for women's golf economics.
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