Lauren Coughlin closed 5-under Sunday at Shadow Creek to win the Aramco Championship and collect her third LPGA Tour title in eight months. The $2.4 million first-place check from the Saudi-backed event moves her career earnings past $4.5 million and cements her position inside the top-15 of the Race to CME Globe with four events remaining.
Coughlin opened with a 67 Thursday, sharing the lead with Nasa Hataoka and Women's PGA champion Amy Yang, then never trailed. She finished the week at 18-under, holding off a Sunday charge from Jin Young Ko by three strokes. The win follows her July 2024 breakthrough at the CPKC Women's Open and a September title at the Kroger Queen City Championship. All three victories came after she turned 31.
The Aramco Championship carries the second-largest purse on the LPGA calendar behind only the CME Group Tour Championship. Saudi Arabia's entry into women's golf through Aramco—the state oil company that also sponsors Formula 1 and the Saudi Pro League—has quietly reordered the tour's economic hierarchy. The $10 million total purse for a 54-hole event in Las Vegas exceeds the prize fund of the U.S. Women's Open by $1 million. Coughlin's single-week payday matches what she earned in her first seven seasons combined.
She played Shadow Creek once before, finishing T-13 in the 2024 edition. That familiarity showed Thursday when she birdied four of her first seven holes while most of the field adjusted to the private Tom Fazio layout. Shadow Creek rarely hosts professional events; it's typically reserved for MGM Resorts high-rollers paying $750 greens fees. The LPGA secured the venue through Aramco's relationship with MGM's sponsorship portfolio, a detail worth noting when the tour's next television-rights negotiation begins in late 2025.
Coughlin's late-career ascent mirrors the LPGA's broader moment. Total tour purses crossed $131 million in 2024, up from $93 million in 2022. Sponsorship revenue climbed 34% over the same period, driven by endemic brands like Mizuho and State Farm but also category expansions into energy and sovereign wealth. Aramco's title sponsorship runs through 2027 with an option for three additional years. The deal includes activations in Saudi Arabia itself, though the tour has not yet announced dates for an event in the Kingdom.
The Race to CME Globe calculates season-long standings using a points system weighted toward purse size. Coughlin now sits 12th with 2,847 points, behind Nelly Korda (6,104) but ahead of former world number one Jin Young Ko (2,521). Only the top-60 qualify for the Tour Championship at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, where the winner takes $4 million from an $11 million purse. Coughlin has already locked her spot and is positioned to finish inside the top-10, which would guarantee invitations to every elevated-purse event in 2027.
She turned professional in 2015 out of the University of Virginia but didn't earn her first LPGA card until 2022 through Epson Tour qualifying. Her rookie season produced one top-10 and $183,000 in earnings. The breakthrough came at 31, an age when most tour careers are declining. She attributes the shift to work with putting coach Stephen Sweeney and a decision to stop chasing distance gains that didn't match her swing speed.
What to watch: Coughlin tees up next at the Lotte Championship in Oahu April 9-12, the tour's first full-field event in Hawaii since 2023. The CME Group Tour Championship follows November 20-23. Aramco's option window on the Shadow Creek extension opens in Q3 2026, and executives will be sizing whether three years of LPGA exposure moved the needle with North American institutional investors who've avoided Saudi-linked portfolios. The company's U.S. refining JV with Motiva reported $2.1 billion EBITDA in 2024, and branding spend is rising ahead of a rumored 2027 IPO for international assets.
Coughlin collected the trophy in a Greyson polo, a brand worn by fewer than 2% of LPGA players but popular among male club professionals. She doesn't yet have an apparel deal. Her agent at Hambric Sports represents six tour players, none with endorsement portfolios exceeding mid-six figures annually. That changes if she finishes top-10 in the Race to CME Globe and banks another $1 million-plus check in Naples.
The takeaway
Coughlin's **$2.4M** payday from Saudi-backed event equals her first seven LPGA seasons; Aramco extension decision comes Q3 2026.
lpgaaramcosaudi sponsorshipwomen's golfrace to cme globelate-career breakout
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