Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Annika blasts Michelle Wie

Q. A lot of people were talking about what happened with Michelle. A lot of people were very concerned about what happened; I wonder if you had any reaction to what she did, the way she did it, and I wonder how some of the players you've talked to felt about it as well.

ANNIKA SORENSTAM: I haven't really talked to any other players. But you know, I just feel that there's a little bit of lack of respect and class just to kind of leave a tournament like that and then come out and practice here, especially being the hostess. You know, I don't know the situation, if it's injury or whatever it is. It's just it just seemed really weird.

Q. Will you talk to her about it?

ANNIKA SORENSTAM: I'm not really sure. I haven't heard anything from her, anyway. It's not really something that I was planning on doing, but if she would talk to me, I'd definitely talk to her.

Q. Would you have felt that way if she had not come out here and practiced?

ANNIKA SORENSTAM: Absolutely. I know what it's like to be injured. I mean, when I was injured, I wasn't able to touch golf clubs for weeks. It's a little funny that you pull out with an injury and then you start grinding. My doctor told me to rest.

Q. So it sounds like you have similar suspicions to a bunch of people who think that the 88 was a factor into that decision?

ANNIKA SORENSTAM: I have no idea what it is, but I know that being a hostess of an event and when you get a sponsor invite, I think you have some responsibilities to the sponsor, to the organizer, and I can tell you that from being part of it now, it's a different side from that aspect.

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Saturday, April 14, 2007

Stick a fork in Annika? If so, can the LPGA move forward?

With Annika Sorenstam now sidelined for a month with a bad back, there seems to be little doubt that her Tiger-like reign atop the LPGA is over. Truth is, as we discussed in this space, her true domination ended last year: she finished third on the 2006 money list, and it was pretty clear that players feared Lorena Ochoa as much or more than Annika (especially in the second half of the season). And, given her recent decline, her age (36) and her injury, the real question is whether Annika will ever be a dominant force again.

In men's golf, most of the would-be challengers to Tiger have been older and are busy fighting their own ailments or demons. Even when besting Tiger one major or over a stretch of events, I do not think many seriously expected Phil or Vijay or Ernie or Retief to have a serious chance to take over the top spot in men's golf for good.

In contrast, not only has Lorena Ochoa emerged as the real deal (she is winning again this weekend as I write this), but there are a number of other great young players shooting to reach the top. (I think Morgan Pressel may have the fire needed to be a great rival for Ochoa, but many other youngsters like Paula Creamer and Brittany Lincicome and Natalie Gulbis and even Michelle Wie have the potential to be a permanent force). This is one of many reasons I find the LPGA more exciting than the PGA these days.

I really hope that LPGA officials, together with appealing youngers like Ochoa and Pressel and Creamer, will recognize their potential to elevate women's golf into a major player in the national sports landscape. Don Imus not withstanding, I doubt that women's team sports will even be able to get anywhere close in popularity to men's team sports. But tennis and ice skating show that, marketed right with good personalities and rivalries, individual women's sports can have cross-over success. Annika (and Wie) have helped achieve some of this success by playing with the men, but I think the LPGA could (and should be trying) to get to the next level on its own.

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