Beth Coulter’s Pro Leap: Why This Irish Prospect Matters More Than You Think
I’ve watched a lot of talented amateurs make the turn professional over my 35 years covering this game, and I can tell you the nerves are always real. But what strikes me about Beth Coulter’s decision to turn pro after this summer isn’t just that she’s good—it’s *how* she’s approaching it with her eyes open.
The Northern Ireland golfer confirmed she’ll go professional following her second Augusta National Women’s Amateur, and honestly, the timing tells you everything you need to know about where women’s golf sits right now. There’s a pathway. There’s opportunity. And perhaps most importantly, there’s a support system that simply didn’t exist when I first started covering professional golf in the late 1980s.
Experience Over Hype
Here’s what caught my attention in Coulter’s comments to BBC Sport NI. Last year at Augusta, she missed the cut—carding rounds of 72 and 77—but rather than that being a devastating setback, she’s using it as a learning opportunity. She told the BBC:
“Last year [at Augusta] everything was so new, exciting and overwhelming. It was so surreal so, this year, I know the lay of the land and having a bit of familiarity. I know how the week runs and am a bit more comfortable in that environment.”
That maturity matters. In my experience as Tom Lehman’s caddie and then covering the tour for three decades, I’ve seen plenty of young players arrive with raw talent but zero perspective. They get humbled by the difference between amateur and professional golf and never recover psychologically. Coulter isn’t coming in blind. She’s tested herself at one of the most prestigious amateur events in the world, felt what it’s like to fall short, and is returning with a clearer mind. That’s the mark of a genuine competitor.
The 20-year-old’s amateur resume is genuinely impressive. Curtis Cup winner in 2024. European Team Championship competitor. World Amateur Team Championship participant. These aren’t participation trophies—these are achievements that require consistency, resilience, and the ability to perform under pressure. Her background suggests she understands what it takes to compete at elite levels.
The LET/LPGA Pipeline Is Real
What I find most encouraging about Coulter’s transition is her awareness of the ecosystem around her. She’s finishing her final semester at Arizona State University—a program that has consistently produced professional golfers—and she’s already plugged into a network of peers who’ve recently made the same jump to the Ladies European Tour and LPGA.
“I know I have a good few people to lean on who have just turned pro. A lot of us on the LET and LPGA just over Christmas met up in Dublin and were talking about the last 10 years how we have grown up together and now four or five of those girls are in the LET and LPGA.”
This is genuinely different from even a decade ago. When I was caddying in the ’90s, the professional women’s tours felt more isolated, more competitive in a zero-sum way. Today’s generation of female golfers are coming up together, supporting each other, and creating a real culture around the women’s game. Coulter will have mentors. She’ll have friends who understand exactly what she’s going through. That support network has proven invaluable for other recent converts.
The Nervous Excitement Is Healthy
I also appreciate that Coulter isn’t pretending this transition is easy. She acknowledged the mixed emotions and the reality that professional golf is, in her words, “the big bad world.” There’s no safety net after amateur golf. No scholarships, no age-group competitions, no participation medals.
“Obviously, it is a bit nerve wracking, there is no next step. Now it is the big bad world, but I am very lucky to do something I love as my job, so it is very exciting.”
That nervousness? That’s actually a positive sign. The players who scare me are the ones who arrive thinking they’ve already figured it out. The ones who treat professional golf like just another amateur tournament with better purses. Coulter seems to understand the magnitude of what’s ahead, which means she’ll likely prepare accordingly.
A Banner Year Ahead
Coulter’s 2025 is shaping up to be significant. She’s got Augusta coming up in the spring, where she can prove that last year’s missed cut was just a learning experience. She’ll turn professional in the summer—likely with sponsorship arrangements already in place, given her profile. And she’s hoping to represent Ireland in the Curtis Cup again, which speaks to her standing in the amateur game.
In my three decades covering professional golf, I’ve learned that the best measure of a young player isn’t their talent alone—it’s their temperament combined with their talent. Coulter has the credentials. She’s proven she can compete at elite amateur levels. She’s got support around her. And she’s approaching the pro game with realistic expectations rather than inflated ego.
Will she make it on the LET or LPGA? That’s the million-dollar question, and honestly, no one can predict that with certainty. But I’d rather see a talented player take a shot with this kind of clarity and preparation than watch another phenom arrive with overconfidence and inadequate perspective. Based on what I’m seeing from Coulter, she’s got a genuine chance to build a meaningful career in professional golf.
That’s worth paying attention to.

