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Early retirement for Annika

Sorenstam will give up competitive golf after this year, saying it's time for other pursuits.

May 14, 2008|Peter Yoon, Times Staff Writer

Yet for all of her LPGA accolades, she might be best remembered for her appearance at the Bank of America Colonial in 2003, when she became the first woman since 1945 to play in a PGA Tour event.

She missed the cut by four shots, but gained legions of fans and elevated the levels of admiration and awareness of the women's game by shooting respectable rounds of 71-74.


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"It would be very difficult to find another golfer who has done as much for the LPGA Tour than Annika," LPGA Tour Commissioner Carolyn Bivens said. "History is still being written, but it's not going to be easy to erase Annika's name from the record books."

Her dominance helped forge a friendship with the dominant male golfer of this generation, and Tiger Woods said it was "sad to see the greatest female golfer of all time step away."

"But it's nice to see Annika did it on her terms," Woods said.

Amy Alcott, a Hall of Fame member whose career overlapped those of Wright, Whitworth and Sorenstam, said that even though Sorenstam didn't get the victory records, her accomplishments are equally impressive.

"She's done everything there is to do in golf and dominated women's golf for a long time and that is more difficult to do today than it was then," Alcott said. "Her level of consistency is unparalleled, and then you add in the 59 and the Colonial and those are the types of things that history remembers."

During her run of dominance, Sorenstam routinely hinted that she would retire early so she could raise a family, but it took an injury-riddled 2007 season to drag her away from the game.

Recovering from back and neck injuries last year, she played a limited schedule, went winless for the first time since 1994 and Lorena Ochoa passed her as the top-ranked player.

But the time off allowed her to spend more time with her fledgling off-course endeavors and showed her that life away from competition could indeed be fulfilling.

"You start thinking, what else is important in life, and what else do I want to achieve on the golf course?" Sorenstam said.

And she said she wants to attack her life away from competition just as she attacked golf courses, which is why she won't play even a limited schedule.

"If I can't have it 100%, then I don't want to give any," she said. "So it's either on or it's not."

She acknowledged that the desire to compete might someday return -- "If it's forever, I'm not really sure, but it's definitely for now," she said -- but said the only reason she came back this year was because she didn't want an injury to end her career.

"I think it's very important for someone as competitive as Annika to go out on top," Alcott said. "She came back and proved to her critics and, most importantly, to herself that she could still be at the top and now she can leave on her own terms."

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peter.yoon@latimes.com

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