Amy Boulden ready for $1m Aramco Saudi Ladies International

Amy Boulden is an ambassador for Golf Saudi, and has visited the Royal Greens Golf and Country Club course three times in recent years and appreciates both its challenges and aesthetics. (Supplied)
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Updated 10 November 2020
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Amy Boulden ready for $1m Aramco Saudi Ladies International

  • Welsh golfer helping to spread the game among young female players in region

JEDDAH: When Welsh golfer Amy Boulden tees off at the $1m Aramco Saudi Ladies International, presented by Public Investment Fund at the Royal Greens Golf and Country Club in King Abdullah Economic City on Thursday morning, she will perhaps be more familiar with her surroundings than most of her rivals.

As an ambassador for Golf Saudi, she has visited the course three times in recent years, and appreciates both its challenges and aesthetics.

“The course is beautiful,” Boulden said. “The views are amazing. especially when you get round to the 15th and 16th holes. I’d say the most challenging parts are probably the greens. You’re going to have to be very specific where you’re hitting it.”

Boulden, who joined the Ladies European Tour in 2014, has been to Saudi Arabia on four occasions now and has taken part in initiatives in Jeddah and Riyadh to attract youngsters who until relatively recently could only have dreamed of such opportunities in women’s sports.

“This is my second year (being a Golf Saudi ambassador),” the 27-year-old said.

“It’s been an amazing partnership. We’re trying to promote golf, women’s golf, junior golf. When we come over here we do a lot of clinics. We came over in January for the men’s event, we did a lot of junior women’s clinics which is very cool to get people involved who had never been before.”

The aim is to produce golfers from the region who can compete against the professionals who will be on show this week. Boulden already sees rising interest among young female golfers in the region.




Boulden, who joined the Ladies European Tour in 2014, has been to Saudi Arabia on four occasions now and has taken part in initiatives in Jeddah and Riyadh to attract youngsters who until relatively recently could only have dreamed of such opportunities in women’s sports. (Supplied)

“We saw last week in Dubai local golfers who played as amateurs at the team event,” she said.

“One of them had a lot of potential, I think she was only 16. I definitely see that the more we come to the Middle East and play and showcase women’s golf, the more we can inspire a generation to pick up a golf club and get involved.”

The caliber of players on show this week will no doubt help to increase the popularity of the sport, with the likes of Solheim Cup heroes Georgia Hall and Charley Hull, championship winners Anna Nordqvist and Anne van Dam, and golfing legend Laura Davies all joining a stellar field.

Four-time major-winner Davies will be seeking a remarkable 86th professional title in a career where she has been named Ladies European Tour Order of Merit winner seven-times and has represented Team Europe in 12 Solheim Cups.

“The Aramco Saudi Ladies International will be quite the watershed moment that allows us to bring the sport we love to a whole new audience in a way that I think blazes a trail for women and sportswomen in and out of Saudi Arabia,” Davies said.

“The two events we’ll be playing in Saudi Arabia will be of great support to the women’s game and a morale boost to all the players after a stop-start 2020.”

“We’re taking women’s golf to a new frontier, both in terms of inspiring new women to give the sport a try and in helping expand the Ladies European Tour event calendar, so it’s a tournament I’m really excited to play in — at what looks like a fabulous golf course.”

More than 100 professional golfers will take part in a tournament where the organizers have taken every step to ensure the safety of players and staff alike.

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READ MORE: Bubbles as Saudi Arabia holds its first women’s golf tournament

Huge global broadcast coverage for Saudi Arabia’s first professional women’s golf tournaments

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Held within a bio-secure environment, the King Abdullah Economic City “bubbles” will be in place throughout the Saudi Ladies International taking place from Nov. 12-15, as well as $500,000 Saudi Ladies Team International, running from Nov. 17-19.

Across a three-week period, the bubbles will act as home to between 500 and 600 people, and the organizers will conduct more than 1,500 COVID-19 tests, including at least three each for the players, caddies and tournament staff.

Boulden says that the players view no longer see such measures as an inconvenience.

“It’s just the world we’re living in at the moment,” she said.

“Obviously we have to take all the safety precautions, which everybody involved in the tournament understands has to happen for the event to go ahead. I think we’re all used to it now, we’ve been doing this since August.”

Also due to COVID-19 restrictions, no spectators will be present on the course at the two Ladies European Tour events, but golf fans can catch the action via 14 global broadcasters across MENA, Europe, the Americas, Asia and Australasia, as well as behind-the-scenes content from the tournament’s digital channels.

For Boulden and her rivals, the absence of supporters becomes more pronounced at the end of the competition.

“I think you only really notice it on the final day, down the final stretch,” she said. “There isn’t the added pressure of having people watching, you definitely notice that little bit more. But it doesn’t take anything from the event, we’re all happy to be out here playing.”

No doubt all the new fans, not to mention aspiring players that women’s golf has been picking up along the way, will be watching from their homes, too.


Al-Ittihad slump to fourth defeat of season in home loss to Al-Ettifaq

Updated 17 January 2026
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Al-Ittihad slump to fourth defeat of season in home loss to Al-Ettifaq

  • Visitors’ Khalid Al-Ghannam scores only goal of the game as the reigning Saudi Pro League champs drop more points after drawing with Damac on Tuesday
  • Earlier, Al-Fateh’s five-game winning streak ends with 1-1 draw against Al-Najma, and Al-Khaleej enjoy comfortable 4-1 victory over Al-Okhdood

RIYADH: Al-Ittihad’s disappointing defense of their Saudi Pro League title continued on Friday with a 1-0 home defeat at the hands of Al-Ettifaq.

Khalid Al-Ghannam scored the decisive goal for the visitors as the hosts dropped more points after their draw with Damac on Tuesday.

In the absence of Fabinho, who was suspended after being sent off late in Tuesday’s match, Mahamadou Doumbia partnered with N’golo Kante in midfield for Al-Ittihad. The Malian showed his composure early on when he shielded the ball under pressure before unleashing a long-range shot in the 10th minute, but it was comfortably saved by Marek Rodak.

The deployment of Al-Ghannam proved pivotal, as he repeatedly tested the hosts. In the 23rd minute he burst down the left flank, beating three defenders with some clever dribbling before testing Predrag Rajkovic in goal, who parried the effort.

Al-Ghannam bothered the defense again just minutes later, threatening the Serbian goalkeeper with another attempt from a similar position. However, the game remained goalless at halftime.

The second half began with Al-Ittihad on the front foot. Within minutes, Roger Fernandes found himself in front of goal and put the ball in the net, only for the goal to be ruled out for offside.

Al-Ghannam’s effort and influence eventually paid off for the visitors in the 54th minute. Operating as a left-sided striker during an Al-Ettifaq counterattack, he cut inside to curl a powerful shot into the far corner.

Al-Ittihad’s attacking approach varied as they fought to get back into the game, with Fernandes patrolling the left flank, Muhannad Al-Shanqeeti cutting inside near the byline, and central contributions from the combination of Doumbia and Steven Bergwijn. But the Al-Ettifaq defense remained resolute.

Danilo Pereira, pushing up into an advanced midfield position as Al-Ittihad forced Al-Ettifaq to defend deep, unleashed a long shot in the 67th minute, urged on by the home fans, but his effort went wide.

With time running out, Sergio Conceicao made four substitutions in the space of seven minutes, bringing on Ahmed Al-Julaydan at right-back for his crossing abilities, Abdulaziz Al-Bishi and Ahmed Al-Ghamdi to play between the lines, and Saleh Al-Shehri for added impetus up front.

Despite several chances, Al-Ittihad were unable to grab the equalizer, and in the 85th minute things got even worse for them. Keeper Rajkovic tripped on his way to confront a Mohau Nkota counterattack and stuck out his hand at the edge of the box to push the ball away. A review by the video assistant referee ruled he had handled the ball outside the box and he was shown the red card.

After seven minutes of added time, and one final attempt by Doumbia to salvage something for the hosts through a free-kick, the referee blew the final whistle.

It was the fourth defeat of the season for Al-Ittihad and means they remain in sixth place in the table, three behind Al-Qadsiah who have a game in hand. Al-Ettifaq are seventh, just two points behind the defending champions.

Earlier, Al-Fateh’s five-game winning streak came to an end when they returned from a trip to Qassim to face Al-Najma with only a point. The visitors took the lead in the 12th minute but a goal for the home side by Ali Jasim in the 75th denied them all three points as the game ended 1-1.

In the Eastern Province, Greek duo Giorgos Masouras and Kostas Fortounis proved the main inspirations for Al-Khaleej in a 4-1 victory over Al-Okhdood that temporarily lifted them into seventh place in the table, until Al-Ettifaq reclaimed the spot.

On Saturday, Al-Fayha face Damac, Al-Kholood take on fourth-place Al-Ahli, and second-place Al-Nassr are in action against Al-Shabab.