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Story by Aksh Gupta

Riyadh Golf Club hosts the 2026 LET season opener this week.
You could be forgiven for thinking the Ladies European Tour season begins quietly.
No fireworks. No massive marketing blitz. No “golf is back” hype on your feed.
And yet, the first LET event of 2026 is about to start with a prize pool that would make most tours sit up straight.
Saudi Ladies International 2026
Venue: Riyadh Golf Club
Dates: 11th–14th February
Prize money: USD 5,000,000 (approx INR 45 crore)
Field: 120 players
Indians in the field: Diksha Dagar, Aditi Ashok, Pranavi Urs, Avani Prashanth, Hitaashee Bakshi
Where to watch in India: Fancode
And most golf fans in India will still accidentally miss it.
Not because they do not care. But because women’s golf is still treated like something you watch only when the leaderboard becomes impossible to ignore.
This week is your chance to get ahead of that.
Here is the simplest way to understand the Saudi Ladies International.
If you like good golf, you should watch it.
Not as a token gesture. Not as a “support women’s sport” moment. Just as a golf fan.
This is a season opener with major-level talent and a prize pool that instantly raises the stakes. Players are not easing into the year. They are arriving with pressure, ambition, and a very clear understanding that early season momentum matters.
Also, it is the kind of tournament where you can see a world-class player shoot 67 and still look mildly annoyed.
That’s always a good sign.
If you are in India, you do not need 15 tabs open or an overly complicated schedule.
You just need this.
Live coverage in India will be available on Fancode.
Rounds 1–3 (Wed - Fri)
4:00 PM – 8:00 PM IST (10:30 – 14:30 GMT)
Final round (Sat)
3:00 PM – 7:00 PM IST (09:30 – 13:30 GMT)
If you are the kind of person who loves watching golf but also has a job, a family, or a boss who thinks “golf content research” is not a real task, the timing is actually not bad.
It is a clean block of viewing.
And it is early-season golf, which means one thing.
Chaos is always on the table.

Wide fairways, water everywhere, and undulating terrain. Riyadh looks friendly until it isn’t.
Riyadh Golf Club is the kind of venue that looks friendly on paper.
Par 72. Wide fairways. Manicured greens. Scenic. Enjoyable for golfers of all levels.
Then you read the next line.
Lakes and streams run across the course terrain.
This is the type of course that invites you to swing freely and then punishes you the moment you get greedy. Wide fairways do not always mean easy golf. Sometimes they simply give you the confidence to aim at flags you have no business aiming at.
The undulating terrain adds another layer. It is not just about hitting the fairway. It is about where on the fairway you end up.
And if you want one small detail that tells you what kind of place this is, here it is.
The front nine is floodlit.
Which is wonderful for evening golf. But it also tells you the course is designed to be watched. It is built like a stage.
And this week, it will be.
For Indian fans, this week is not about “Indians in the field.”
It is about five very different golfers, all at different points in their careers, playing a season opener with a massive purse and a world-class field.
The five Indian players in the field are Diksha Dagar, Aditi Ashok, Pranavi Urs, Avani Prashanth and Hitaashee Bakshi.
What makes this interesting is not just the representation.
It is the variety.
Some of them are experienced at this level. Some are still building their identity on tour. Some are steady grinders. Some are capable of sudden low rounds that come out of nowhere.
This is the kind of event where you do not need to win to have a huge week.
You just need four rounds that look like they belong.
Before Thursday: Who are you backing as the best Indian finisher this week?
If you only watch one LET event this month, watch this one because the field is not playing around.
A few names that instantly raise the ceiling of the tournament are Charley Hull, Celine Boutier, Danielle Kang, Ariya Jutanugarn among others.
This is a major-quality field disguised as a season opener.
This is the kind of lineup where you can watch one group and feel like you are watching a major. Not in hype. In quality.
The ball-striking. The speed of decision-making. The way they manage risk. The way they recover from trouble like trouble was never a big deal.
If you are an amateur golfer, it is also a reminder of something uncomfortable.
The gap between “good golf” and “elite golf” is not distance. It is discipline.

Charley Hull of England during the Solheim Cup
Most Indian golf fans are not ignoring this on purpose.
They are missing it because it does not arrive with the same noise.
No dramatic countdown. No constant highlights. No mainstream push. And the LET, despite producing some of the best competitive golf in the world, still sits in that strange space where you have to choose to follow it.
But that is also why it is worth watching.
Because when you follow a tour early, before it becomes a trend, you actually learn the players. You understand the season. You start recognising patterns. You stop watching golf only for the final round drama and start appreciating what it takes to stay in contention for four straight days.
Also, selfishly, it makes you look like the smartest golf fan in the room.
Before the first round starts, pick one thing.
Not a winner. Not a prediction you will delete later.
Pick one Indian player you think will have the best week.
Then pick one global star you think will dominate.
And commit to watching at least one full hour of coverage without scrolling.
If you do, you will realise something quickly.
This tournament is not being under-watched because it is small.
It is being under-watched because golf fans are late.
The Saudi Ladies International is a season opener with a INR 45 crore purse, a stacked field, five Indian players, and a course built like a stage.
If you miss it, you will not miss it because it was not worth watching.
You will miss it because you assumed someone else would tell you when it mattered.
This is that moment.
Stay tuned on 4moles.com for full tournament coverage.
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