The LPGA Tour's Aramco Championship at Shadow Creek Golf Course in Las Vegas has abandoned its traditional match-play format in favor of standard stroke play for 2025, while maintaining a $9.8 million purse with $1.764 million to the winner. The shift eliminates the seven-match, five-day grind that defined the event's previous iterations at Tom Fazio's ultra-private layout.
The change arrives in year two of Saudi Aramco's title sponsorship of what was formerly the Bank of Hope LPGA Match-Play. Shadow Creek has hosted LPGA events intermittently since 2017, nearly always under the match-play structure that required players to navigate a bracket rather than post cumulative scores. That format is gone. The field now plays 72 holes of stroke play Thursday through Sunday, with Lauren Coughlin holding a five-stroke lead at the halfway point after posting 69 in Friday's difficult conditions.
The format switch matters because match play historically compressed sponsor exposure into unpredictable windows—a marquee player could exit Wednesday, killing four days of promotional value. Stroke play guarantees the full field remains visible through the weekend, which matters when your title sponsor is spending eight figures to associate with women's golf in a market where Saudi Arabia is building parallel infrastructure in men's events (LIV Golf) and attempting to purchase pathways into the PGA Tour itself. Aramco's LPGA presence now mirrors its activation strategy in Formula 1, where consistent four-day visibility outweighs the drama of elimination formats.
The $9.8 million purse ranks among the top five non-major events on the LPGA calendar, a figure unchanged from 2024 despite the format overhaul. That holding pattern is notable: while PGA Tour signature events have pushed past $20 million and LIV routinely posts $25 million for 54-hole shotgun starts, the LPGA's top-tier sponsor-driven events remain anchored near $10 million. The gap explains why agents are pushing clients toward content deals and appearance fees that supplement tour earnings, and why the LPGA has prioritized international expansion into markets where sponsors will pay for association rather than just performance.
Shadow Creek itself is part of the calculus. The course is a private MGM Resorts asset, unavailable for public play and rarely photographed outside tournament windows. That scarcity has value in an era when every PGA Tour stop looks like TPC Interchangeable, but it also limits community engagement and youth programming, the metrics corporate sponsors now cite when justifying women's sports spend to boards. The LPGA is effectively trading exclusivity for activation flexibility, using a format that keeps stars in play longer to justify the access fee MGM charges for the venue.
Watch whether the stroke-play format survives into 2026. The LPGA's spring calendar has three events in a four-week span (Florida, Arizona, Nevada), and operator fatigue on match play was cited informally when the change was announced. If television ratings and sponsor renewal metrics improve under stroke play, expect the format to lock in for Aramco's remaining contract years. Separately, track whether Aramco expands its LPGA footprint beyond this single event; the company has been in exploratory conversations about a second U.S. stop, likely in Texas or the Carolinas, according to two people familiar with the discussions. That decision hinges partly on how Shadow Creek performs as a pure stroke-play showcase.
Coughlin's five-stroke lead through 36 holes suggests the course plays harder under stroke-play scoring than it did under match-play's match-to-match reset, which was the point. Aramco wanted a tournament that looked like a major in difficulty and purse structure, even if the format now matches every other week on tour.
The takeaway
LPGA drops match play for stroke play at Aramco's **$9.8M** Shadow Creek event, prioritizing sponsor visibility over format novelty.
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