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June 2007 - Posts

  • Annika Sorenstam Set for US Open Defense

    The gradual slide from the top of women's golf began at the major championship that brought Annika Sorenstam so much satisfaction.

    She salvaged her worst season of this decade last year at the U.S. Women's Open, a week where everything went right. The thick fog that wiped out the first round at Newport Country Club gave her an extra day to refine her swing. Her stamina carried her through 36 holes on Sunday, and a four-shot victory in the 18-hole playoff.

    That also was when she first felt slight soreness in her neck, which was nothing more than a nuisance at the time. It turned into much more than that. Only nine months later did Sorenstam realize she had a bulging disk in her back and a ruptured disk in her neck, knocking her out of competition for two months.

    "It's funny how things come together one way or another," Sorenstam said Tuesday.

    What she craves now is for everything to fall back into place. The U.S. Women's Open is her third tournament back after recovering from her injuries, and already the world she once ruled has changed so much.

    Lorena Ochoa is the No. 1 player in women's golf, expanding her lead in the ranking by winning last week in a playoff. Morgan Pressel became the youngest major champion in LPGA history when the 18-year-old captured the Kraft Nabisco Championship. The other major went to Suzann Pettersen, a dynamic Norwegian and disciple of the "Vision 54" concept under which Sorenstam matured into a star.

    There are two dozen teenagers at Pine Needles, and that doesn't include 12-year-old Alexis Thompson, the youngest qualifier ever.

    For Sorenstam, the challenge has rarely been this severe -- and just from the competition.

    "My challenges are that I have not been 100 percent for a while, and it's been tough to get motivated," she said. "I'm looking forward to getting my motivation back. I'm excited to be 100 percent again, so I can be up there and get back to it. It just hasn't been that way the last few months, and maybe part of last year."

    She doesn't look at Ochoa, still missing a major to validate her role as No. 1, rather to herself. There is a part of Sorenstam that believes she decides who's the best, and it starts with her getting healthy.

    It helped slightly that her last form of competition, though unofficial, came 10 days ago when she beat Ochoa on the fourth extra hole to win a skins game exhibition.

    But the U.S. Women's Open is where history means more than money. Sorenstam has a chance this week to join Mickey Wright and Betsy Rawls as the only four-time winners of the most prestigious event in women's golf.

    And it helps being back at Pine Needles.

    This is the course where Sorenstam won her second U.S. Women's Open title in 1996 with a display of precision that defines her career. She missed only five fairways over four rounds, winning by five shots.

    The course has been lengthened since 2001, when Karrie Webb won by eight shots at the peak of her rivalry with Sorenstam. It now measures 6,664 yards as a par 71, the longest championship course at sea level. Sorenstam worked on her chipping and putting Monday, and her practice round Tuesday was interrupted by thunderstorms.

    But the place brings back good memories, good vibes.

    "I have confidence just being inside the ropes," she said. "That's where I like to be, that's where I think I belong. I have confidence to go ahead and play again, just knowing that I'm healthy, and knowing that my game is coming around. It's great to be the defending champion. This tournament has always meant the most to me. This is the event that I always get geared up for."

    Sorenstam said she has been without pain for the last several weeks, although she still struggles to trust herself enough to attack every shot. She has increased her practice sessions, now hitting as many balls as she needs.

    "If I can hit it where my caddie tells me, I'm not so worried," she said.

    This is the longest Sorenstam has gone without a victory to start a season. Although the focus ranges from Ochoa going after her first major to Thompson being the youngest qualifier to 17-year-old Michelle Wie trying to break par for the first time in nearly a year, Sorenstam is lurking.

    "You can never count Annika out," Pressel said. "She's an amazing competitor. She practices really hard. She wants to be out here, and she wants to be playing well. I'm not sure the status of her injury and how she's feeling, but I'm sure she'll have a good showing."

    Sorenstam has 10 majors, still five from the record held by Patty Berg. She also is stuck on 69 tour victories, and it looks unlikely she can reach the 88 won by Kathy Whitworth.

    "With the competition so tough and me starting to think about other things, I'm not sure that will happen," Sorenstam said. "Right now, I'm just happy to be back here. I'm focusing on this week, and we'll see how it goes."




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  • Michelle Wie Pulls Out Of John Deere Classic

    Unable to break par against the women, Michelle Wie is taking a break from competing against the men.

    Wie decided Tuesday to withdraw from the John Deere Classic as she tries to return from wrist injuries that have sent the 17-year-old from Hawaii into a deep slump of high scores and shrinking confidence.

    "While my rehabilitation is on schedule, I do not have all of my strength back yet," Wie said in a statement. "The TPC Deere Run course is obviously very long, and I just don't have the length to play there right now."

    Wie said she still plans to play next week in the U.S. Women's Open at Pine Needles, and she said she would keep playing the rest of the summer as she tries to regain strength in her wrists.

    Wie has played the John Deere Classic the last two years on sponsor exemptions, nearly making the cut as a 15-year-old in 2005 with a performance that made her a celebrity with the community. She was one shot below the cut line until a double bogey and a bogey late in her round, missing by two shots with rounds of 70-71.

    She opened with a 77 last year, then withdrew midway through the second round with what was said to be heat exhaustion. Wie was taken from the course on a stretcher.

    Wie's right wrist was taped at the Sony Open in January on the PGA Tour, where she shot 78-76, then she broke a bone in her left wrist when she fell while jogging in a park a few weeks later. Wie sat out four months, returning at the Ginn Tribute in South Carolina only to withdraw under curious circumstances.

    She was 14 over through 16 holes when she withdrew citing her injured wrists. Two more bogeys would have invoked the LPGA Tour's "Rule 88," in which non-tour members are banned for a year if they can't break 88. She showed up at Bulle Rock two days later to get ready for the LPGA Championship, and finished at 21 over par, including an 83 in the third round.

    Wie, who graduated high school earlier this month, has gone 20 consecutive rounds without breaking par, eight of those against the men.

    The John Deere Classic begins July 12, two weeks after the U.S. Women's Open.

    "We support Michelle's decision and we sincerely hope she continues on the path to reach her full potential in every aspect of her life," tournament director Clair Peterson said. "We look forward to welcoming her back when the time is right."




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  • U.S. Open Special: Tiger, Phil, Ernie, Zack and The Brutality Of Oakmont

    Take the best golfers in the world and arguably the most difficult golf course in the world and what have you got? That's right, it's U.S. Open week.

    To celebrate the greatest week in golf we're starting with a tale about the brutality of Oakmont where members claim that all they do to prepare for the Open is to make the course easier. Gulp. Then we take a look at Tiger's U.S. Open track record and his paltry two wins, followed by Phil's chances in spite of his wrist injury and with last year's catastrophe still in the back of his mind. We'll touch on Ernie's ten-year dry spell since winning his second Open in 1997, and the new kid on the block, Master's champion Zack Johnson and how he needs this win more than most.

    It's Open week and we couldn't be more excited.


    Brutal Oakmont Ready For U.S. Open

    Vaughn Taylor is back at Oakmont, relieved that it's only the U.S. Open.

    There has been widespread talk of gloom and doom in recent weeks, from defending champion Geoff Ogilvy reportedly losing seven balls in his round of 85 to Vijay Singh and a host of others saying they would not be surprised if the winner finished 10 shots over par.

    Oakmont is reputed to be the toughest golf course in America, but there is another part of the mystique that players should keep in mind.

    If you think it's tough now, come back in July.

    "The members say we don't have to do anything except maybe make it slightly easier," said Mike Davis, the USGA's senior director of rules and competition who sets up the course for the toughest test in golf.

    Taylor can attest to that.

    He hasn't played in the U.S. Open since 1998, when he was spooked by the narrow fairways and high rough. But he has been to Oakmont twice in the last few years to play a corporate outing, and the greens were unlike any he has played.

    "I had two four-putts and three three-putts, and I putted pretty good that day," said Taylor, one of the best on the PGA Tour. "The greens are slower now than they usually are."

    Monday was the first day of practice for the U.S. Open, the first chance for many to see what the fuss is all about. Along with some of the fastest greens anywhere, the rough is as punishing as ever -- so punishing Phil Mickelson attributes his left wrist injury to chipping countless times out of the rough during his marathon practice rounds two weeks ago.

    Mickelson had his wrist tightly wrapped Monday and did not play a practice round. He only hit half-shots from the grass on the range, placing his ball on a tee to hit a middle iron, graduating to a hybrid that made short-game coach Dave Pelz wince with nervousness, and he hit only one shot with his driver before going back to 30-yard chips.

    He plans to play his first round since he withdrew after 11 holes at the Memorial.

    Tiger Woods started on the back nine and played 18 holes and offered this prognosis: "I broke 100."

    But there have been few complaints. They say it is tough but fair, but they have yet to put pencil to scorecard.

    "It is stifling difficult, to the point of walking off and feeling like you've got 12 rounds with Ali," Paul Goydos said.

    He tied for 44th in 1994, the last time the U.S. Open was held at Oakmont, and it is one of his favorite U.S. Open courses. Beyond the famous Church Pew bunkers and frightening fast greens, what intrigues Goydos is the membership, specifically why anyone would want to belong to a club that beats you to a pulp.

    "They have an interesting mentality," he said. "I think they're all insane. These people must like losing balls and shooting 100."

    But one way Goydos measures what is a great golf course is how many times it has held the U.S. Open, and he attributes Oakmont's spot in the rotation to a membership that loves seeing how the best players in the world can handle their course.

    "The members here relish the opportunity," he said. "They can't wait to have you here. You can feel how excited they are in the clubhouse. They're like a bunch of peacocks showing off their feathers."

    Kevin Sutherland was amazed at the rough, and not because it was a U.S. Open. The USGA again is using a graduated rough, which gets longer the farther a player is from the fairway. It was thick and nasty, and he expects that at a U.S. Open.

    What got his attention was realizing the bunkers determined the rough line, meaning the fairways were just as narrow for the members during a summer fourball than it is for the U.S. Open.

    "Unless the bunkers are supposed to be in the fairway," he said, shaking his head.

    This is what led Padraig Harrington of Ireland to suggest that the USGA take the week off. He figures there's not much for its staff to do this week if it wants to protect par. Oakmont already does that.

    "What this golf course does is give the USGA more control over scoring," he said. "You could turn up here when there's not a tournament and play a tournament. By its nature, it's already difficult. It's a struggle. They don't have to put the pin 2 feet over a tier. They could put the pin 2 yards over a tier. It's tough enough."

    It certainly looked that way on a warm, breezy sunny afternoon. Craig Kanada opted to hit a hybrid off the 313-yard 17th hole, where the big hitters often opt for driver. His first shot was gobbled up by the rough on the left side. His second shot took one hop and disappeared into the high grass. He finally got it right on the third try.

    Jeff Brehaut, playing in his first major championship, walked off the 18th green and handed golf balls to the two volunteers who walked around with him and U.S. Senior Open champion Allen Doyle.

    When asked whether he had enough balls left to give away, Brehaut smiled. "I lost a few of them out there," he said.

    Taylor grew up and still lives in Augusta, Ga., but he was asked whether Oakmont was a club he would like to join if he lived here.

    "I don't know if I could play here every day," Taylor said. "This course just beats you up."


    Tiger Woods Ready For US Open

    It's been five years since Tiger Woods last won the US Open, the major he has had least success at.

    But his chances this year are way better than at the same time last year when he chose to return to competition at tough Winged Foot after a 10-week layoff during which his father Earl died.

    Short on confidence and still emotional about the bereavement, Woods shot two straight 76s and missed the cut by three strokes, ending a run of 39 straight cuts made in majors. That streak had included all 37 he had played as a professional.

    Twelve months on, the sadness in the world No.1's life has been replaced with the joy and anticipation over the pending summer birth of his first child with wife Elin.

    His form has been mixed this year so far, but this time around he is relishing the challenge presented by Oakmont, which is being billed as even tougher than Winged Foot.

    "Last year was a complete 180 (degrees) of where I am now in my life. I had not played a tournament since Augusta," he said after completing a practice round at the famed course in the hilly countryside outside of Pittsburgh.

    "Last year my father passed away in that time frame and I wasn't quite ready to play until I got to the US Open. Probably not exactly the best tournament to come back in.

    "So this year I'm going to be a father shortly, and I think that's a complete polar opposite of where I was last year at this time."

    On the subject of having won just the two US Opens (2002 Bethpage and 2000 Pebble Beach) compared to four Masters, three British Opens and three USPGA's, Woods denied that he had a relatively poor record at the event.

    But he admitted that the second of the year's four majors did have its particularities that made it difficult for all of the players.

    "It's probably the most difficult championship that we face all year, because you're tested from tee-to-green and you're tested on the greens," he said.

    "Generally if you're missing one facet of your game, more than likely you're not going to win the championship. You have to have everything going."

    When he tees off this week in the company of defending champion Geoff Ogilvy of Australia and the US Amateur Champion Richie Ramsay from Scotland, Woods will be playing competitively at Oakmont for the first time.

    But he is complimentary of the sweeping changes made to the course since the US Open was last played here in 1994, notably with the removal of over 5,000 trees to return the layout more to the way it looked in 1903 when it was opened as an inland course with a links feel to it.

    "I think it's fantastic," he said. "It opens the golf course up. It gives a better atmosphere to the gallery. You can see more holes. It brings everyome together. Everyone can see across holes, hear things better and see what's going on.

    "And also by opening the golf course up, when the wind blows like today, it's really going to blow."

    But delighted though he may be with the way the course looks, Woods said he was fearful of the greens which he deemed "the most difficult I have ever played."

    "I thought Winged Foot's pretty tough, Augusta's pretty tough, but both course have flat spots. Here I'm trying to figure out where the flat shelf is!"


    Injured Phil Mickelson Tees It Up At U.S. Open

    Phil Mickelson looked more like a bowler than a three-time major champion, adjusting the black brace on his left wrist as he stared down the first fairway, an alley lined not by gutters but the gnarly, ankle-deep rough of Oakmont Country Club.

    It was a gentle swing and a favorable result, right down the middle.

    He played only nine holes Tuesday, but it was the first time he had played golf since he withdrew May 31 after 11 holes of the Memorial with an inflamed left wrist. He had hoped to play without pain at the U.S. Open, but he will settle for playing.

    "I should be able to have it be manageable as long as I don't aggravate it," Mickelson said. "Or hit it in the rough."

    Talk about a miracle cure.

    Mickelson's inability to keep the ball in the short grass is the reason he comes to this major with as much inflammation in his psyche as his left wrist. A year ago at Winged Foot, he was one par away from an elusive U.S. Open title until hitting a tee shot off a corporate tent, against a tree and into a bunker, making double bogey on the 18th hole to finish one shot behind Geoff Ogilvy.

    Having already tied the U.S. Open record for most second-place finishes -- four -- Mickelson showed up at Oakmont two weeks ago for his marathon practice sessions, where he sticks tiny flags on the putting surface and slowly works his way around the green chipping out of the rough from every conceivable angle. He believes that's how he injured his wrist.

    Now, his best hope this week might be staying out of the thick grass.

    "I think it's important to drive the ball very well here, obviously, and that's going to be the biggest challenge for me," he said. "But this should not be a long-term problem if I don't aggravate the inflammation. And this, unfortunately, isn't the best week for that, given my driving history."

    It's not a good week for anyone not at full strength.

    Reputed to be the toughest golf course in the country, Oakmont offers a complete test. The course is not the longest, even if it has the longest par 5 (667 yards) and longest par 3 (288 yards) in major championship history. The greens are so fast that the U.S. Open staff slows them down to keep it fair.

    "It's probably the most difficult championship that we face all year, because you're tested from tee-to-gree, and you're tested on the greens," two-time champion Tiger Woods said. "Generally, if you're missing one facet of your game, more than likely you're not going to win the championship. You have to have everything going."

    That presumably means all body parts working at full capacity. And while the pain is in Mickelson's wrist, the key might be his head.

    "He's a power player," said Ernie Els, another two-time U.S. Open champion who has played with a bad wrist, back and is just now recovering from surgery to repair knee ligaments. "You go at it aggressively, you have to just somehow try and put the pain in the back of your head if you can. I don't know how severe it is. When you're under the gun, you get competitive, you want to hit it the way you always do. You've just got try to and not think about it."

    This might be the most rust Mickelson has brought to a major championship, certainly this one. He prefers to play the week before a major, but pulled out last week on the PGA Tour to give his wrist more time to heal. Rarer still is not playing a full 18 holes on any of the practice days leading up to the tournament.

    "I could have played 18, but I don't want to push it," Mickelson said.

    He tried to play last Tuesday and couldn't, so he called his doctors for a cortisone shot to help ease the inflammation. On his way to Pittsburgh, he took a detour to Las Vegas to work with swing coach Butch Harmon. He still couldn't play.

    But with therapy, ice and rest, Mickelson believes it's getting better.

    He hit balls for the first time Monday upon his arrival at Oakmont, but only took one swing with the driver and didn't take any full shots off the ground, using a tee to hit middle irons. He only pulled out the driver a couple of times over nine holes Tuesday.

    Perhaps the biggest disappointment was seeing rough actually shorter than when he got hurt. Woods and Ogilvy noticed the same thing. Ogilvy was reported to have shot 85 last week while losing seven balls, but the Australian set the record straight.

    "I think I shot 83 and lost two," Ogilvy said. "But it was hard. It was five shots harder last Monday than it is right now. I didn't think there would be one score in the 60s at all, and I thought there would be scores in the 90s the way we played it last Monday. But the last couple of days, it's been a lot more playable than that."

    Some of that was a storm that moved in over the weekend, some of that was knocking the rust off the lawnmowers.

    Woods is not convinced about the latter.

    "I know they had the mowers out there," he said. "I don't know if they did anything."

    He has played two full practice rounds this week, but plans to do nothing but chip and putt Wednesday. His practice partner has been big-hitting Bubba Watson, and even with Watson's swing speed, Woods was amazed to watch him try to hit 5-iron out of the rough right of the 15th fairway and watch the ball squirt only about 30 feet.

    That's the reason Mickelson will try to keep his game on the straight and narrow, now more than ever.

    He switched from bandages to the brace, and says his right wrist also is sore because of favoring it during light workouts. As for his expectation, this is one time Mickelson didn't want to get into any specifics.

    "I want to ... continue to improve my ball-striking without aggravating my wrist anymore," he said.

    The best medicine is staying out of the rough -- for Mickelson and everyone else.


    Ernie Els Seeks 1994 Inspiration

    Ernie Els laughs when he looks at video footage of his first U.S. Open victory at Oakmont Country Club 13 years ago.

    His putting, though, is a more serious matter and he would dearly love to replicate his 1994 form on the greens during this week's championship at the same venue.

    "I made a lot of putts back then and that's why I won in '94," South African Els told reporters as he prepared for the opening round.

    "I made a ton of putts from inside 10, 12 feet in one of the best putting weeks of my life. If I can make some putts at the start of this week, who knows?

    "These are the toughest greens we'll ever play in U.S. Open history, or in any other golf tournament we play for that matter."

    Els, a raw 24-year-old when he beat Britain's Colin Montgomerie and American Loren Roberts in a playoff for the 1994 title, believes he has become a much better player in every other department of the game.

    "I've won over 60 events and won another two majors since then," he said. "I feel more experienced and I guess I am a better player. But I'd like to make more putts."

    The world number five, who claimed his second U.S. Open crown at Congressional in 1997, has been amused watching television replays of his 1994 Oakmont success.

    "I had a different hat in those days and a different hair style," he said with a smile.

    "When I first came here, I didn't give myself too much of a chance so I just kind of enjoyed the experience.

    "But I had a bit of game when I came in here, a bit of confidence, and I went with that. Before I could notice, I was leading the Open going into Sunday."

    Winless on the PGA Tour for almost three years, Els believes he is close to his best.

    "I've been hitting it pretty well the last couple of weeks and made a lot of birdies, but I've also made some incredible ugly numbers, too," he said.

    "When it's good, it's really good. I've got a lot of support here and I'll just try and feed off that. We've got a tough course and I've just got to try and hang in there."


    Zach Johnson Seeks Second Major Title

    Zach Johnson didn't do much to prepare for the U.S. Open.

    The whirlwind that followed his Masters win finally caught up with him two weeks ago, forcing Johnson into bed with a case of strep throat. Instead of rushing back onto the course, he chilled out at his parents' house in Iowa, caught up on his sleep and practiced a little at the course where he feels the most comfortable.

    "I was able to rest, hang out with the family a good bit," Johnson said Tuesday. "I was home for about a week and it was just very nice to just rest. I haven't really been able to do that."

    No wonder.

    Johnson surprised everybody but himself when he withstood a Tiger Woods charge to win the Masters in April. Though he'd won in Atlanta as a rookie, had several other solid finishes and was a member of last year's Ryder Cup team, he was never dubbed the next great up-and-comer. He's not flashy -- on the course or off -- and he was one of those guys who could show up at most tournaments without causing much of a stir.

    But Johnson put himself in contention with solid rounds in a week that Augusta was wreaking havoc on nearly everyone's game. Then, just as Woods was closing in, Johnson put together three birdies in a four-hole stretch to win.

    "Ignorance is bliss, because I didn't know where he was until 15, and I managed to birdie 16," said Johnson, who was two holes in front of Woods on Sunday at Augusta.

    Since then, though, little in Johnson's life has been calm. Or anonymous.

    After the Masters, he and his wife flew to New York, where he met with sponsors and hobnobbed with talk-show hosts, including David Letterman. (No. 4 on his Top 10 list of Things I Can Say Now That I Won the Masters: "I just wrote down `3' for every hole. Nobody checked.")

    The very next weekend, he was back on the PGA Tour, playing the Verizon Heritage.

    Most players would have skipped that tournament, and no one would have blamed them. But not only did Johnson show up, he gutted out a sixth-place finish. A month later, he won again, beating Ryuji Imada in a playoff at the AT&T Classic in Atlanta.

    Only Woods, with three, has more victories on the PGA Tour this year. And only the Big Three -- Woods, Phil Mickelson and Vijay Singh -- are ahead of him on the FedEx Cup list.

    "Atlanta, certainly for me, spoke volumes, and it just gave me the reassurance that Augusta was not a fluke," Johnson said. "Not that I ever thought it was. But you can get lucky at times. Maybe not a major, but Atlanta was huge in that respect."

    Now everywhere he turns people want just a few minutes with the Masters champ. He's a draw at tournaments -- sometimes the biggest draw -- and what little free time he had before has dwindled even further.

    "The only sense of normalcy I've had, for the most part, has been inside the ropes," he said. "I like it there."

    By the time he showed up at The Memorial, though, his body had had it. His head was throbbing and his throat was burning from strep. He tried to play, but withdrew after hitting his drive on the 16th hole.

    He went back to Cedar Rapids, where he slept and recuperated. He practiced some at Elmcrest Country Club, the course where he grew up playing, but only when his body allowed.

    Best of all, he finally got to spend time with his family and friends.

    "We had a party for close friends, relatives. And my wife, being the woman that she is, she surprised me and, for the most part, the entire Drake University golf team I was a part of and my coach were flown in," Johnson said. "That was pretty cool.

    "It was just casual, laid back. Just very much local, very much Cedar Rapids and Elmcrest, where I'm from. It was fun."

    Now it's back to work.

    This is only Johnson's fourth time playing a U.S. Open, and he's missed the cut the last two years. But just as he did at Augusta, he's got a game plan for taming Oakmont Country Club. And it includes laying up on those long par 5s.

    One of the most notable statistics from Johnson's win at Augusta was he didn't go for a single par 5 the entire week, no matter his distance. That won't be as much of an issue at Oakmont, where there are only two par 5s, but Johnson said he'll lay up on those, too.

    "My preparation for this week, it's very much in line with Augusta," he said. "Driver is very important. Tee shots are very important, just like it is at Augusta and, for me, wedges. I'm going to miss fairways, so I have to wedge it out and wedge it to the green.

    "I think a lot of this golf course is positioning," he added. "Giving yourself a chance at par and eliminating double."



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  • Criticism Grows Around Michelle Wie

    Phil Mickelson withdrew because of a wrist injury and flew home to San Diego for an MRI. He saw two doctors, had one cortisone shot and decided to withdraw from his next tournament.

    Michelle Wie withdrew because of a wrist injury and went to the range to hit balls.

    In fairness, at least she took a day off.

    Maybe that made her left wrist feel better, but it did nothing to quell the mounting criticism around her.

    That the 17-year-old from Honolulu would walk out of the Ginn Tribute last week with only two holes left in the first round is suspicious enough. The LPGA Tour has a rule that nonmembers who don't break 88 -- and Wie was two bogeys away from that -- cannot play again for the rest of the year.

    Worse yet was showing up at Bulle Rock on the weekend to hit balls. She played the pro-am Monday at the LPGA Championship, practiced some more on Tuesday and has no expectations for the second major of the year, conceding she is not at her best.

    That didn't sit well with the LPGA Tour's biggest star -- Annika Sorenstam -- who happened to be the tournament host at the Ginn.

    "I just feel that there's a little bit of lack of respect and class just to leave a tournament like that and then come out and practice here," said Sorenstam, who soldiered on for four days despite returning from a back and neck injury.

    "It's a little funny that you pull out with an injury and then you start grinding. My doctor told me to rest."

    Sorenstam was quick to note that Wie received a sponsor's exemption to the tournament. That means she was invited. The feeling on the LPGA Tour is that Wie has mistaken invitation for entitlement.

    Only it is becoming apparent that Wie doesn't see it that way.

    She opened her press conference Tuesday afternoon wanting to clarify a few issues from last week. One suspected there might be an apology to the tournament sponsors for a situation beyond her control. Instead, she explained when she injured her wrist during the tournament (first hole), how she injured her wrist in the first place (running in a park) and that she still wasn't 100 percent.

    "I'm going through a hard time," she said. "It's my first time facing an injury."

    Asked about Sorenstam's criticism, Wie said nothing was said to her and she had nothing to say back.

    "I don't think I need to apologize for anything," she said. "I just have to take care of my body and move forward and only think of positive things."

    Those are becoming hard to find.

    The hysteria over Wie was at a high last year at Bulle Rock. She had narrowly missed qualifying for the U.S. Open at Winged Foot, stopped only by her putting at the Canoe Brook qualifier. She was poised to become golf's youngest major champion until a wayward wedge from the 16th fairway of the final round at the LPGA Championship.

    But her game began to disintegrate that summer. She was taken away on a stretcher from the John Deere Classic. She finished dead last in consecutive weeks in Switzerland and Pennsylvania competing against the men. She failed to break 80 at the Casio World Open on the Japanese tour. She even struggled against the women, finishing 17th in a field of 20 at the Samsung World Championship.

    Her troubles now go beyond the wrist injury and her swing.

    She talked endlessly Tuesday about wanting to have fun, yet there was a quiver in her voice, and no one would have been surprised to see a tear. One minute she begged for patience, the next she was defiant as ever.

    Along with public criticism from Sorenstam and private skepticism from a host of others, she was further rattled when LPGA Tour commissioner Carolyn Bivens spoke to her camp about her behavior in the Ginn pro-am.

    "I think it was very insulting because I tried my best," Wie said. "It's my sixth year out here, and I played in numerous pro-ams, and I think it's ridiculous to make any false accusations about me. I just hope she gets better information."

    The nature of the complaints remained a mystery. Wie said she was busy with housing applications at Stanford and "way too many other things to stress about," and suggested someone take it up with her manager or Bivens.

    "You should talk to the commissioner," agent Greg Nared said.

    Bivens did not make herself available, saying through a spokeswoman that the conversation was between her and the Wies.

    By all accounts, an LPGA Tour official was involved in discussions with the Wie camp about the tour's infamous "Rule 88" shortly before she withdrew. It would have been interesting to see what the tour would have done had Wie finished her round and shot 88 or worse, because it has a recent history of amending the rules for a certain teenager from Hawaii.

    Remember, the rules were changed in 2005 that allowed Wie to become the first amateur to compete in the LPGA Championship. That was the same year the Women's British Open no longer counted against the limit of six LPGA exemptions.

    Wie, whose class at Punahou School went through commencement without her Saturday night in Honolulu, said she would be patient with herself and asked others to do the same.

    "I'm only human," she said.

    But she is no longer the prodigy that amazed the golf world with such power for such youth.

    She is 17, but no longer a kid.

    There was a time the LPGA Tour needed Wie a lot more than Wie needed the LPGA Tour. That might not be the case anymore.

    People are far more willing to forgive a bad round than bad manners.




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  • Busy Summer Ahead For Tiger Woods

    As his wife prepares to give birth to the couple's first child, Tiger Woods is giving birth to his first PGA Tour golf tournament.

    There's something else called the U.S. Open coming up, too.

    The top player in the world is a very busy man these days.

    "My time management skills are going to be tested," Woods said. "But, then again, these are all things that are very exciting: hosting my first tour event, playing in the U.S. Open, and above all, the birth of a first child. ... Thankfully, I don't sleep much."

    His voice turned down a notch by a case of strep throat, Woods dropped by Congressional Country Club on Tuesday to promote the AT&T National, which will be run by his foundation and will debut July 5-8. Those dates are important, because that's around the time his wife, Elin, is due.

    "My intent is to play," Woods said. "But my wife has something to say about that. Especially for the inaugural event, I want to be here. But as everyone understands, our No. 1 priority in our lives is our child. You only get to witness it for the first time only once."

    Woods said it's been difficult delegating his time because he wants to be hands-on with an event associated with his name. It's a rush job because the tournament wasn't announced until March, after the International in Denver vacated the July date.

    "It's hard work," Woods said. "It really is. You don't do this with golf tournaments, especially on this scale. It just doesn't happen."

    "We wanted to make this a family atmosphere," Woods said. "A lot of times I play tournaments around the world where the prices of tickets are basically out of control."

    Woods also has been his recruiting fellow golfers to play in the tournament. But they, like him, set their schedules well in advance. Ernie Els won't be coming -- he'll be in Europe. Phil Mickelson probably won't play, either. Vijay Singh is "up in the air," according to Woods.

    Jim Furyk, Adam Scott, Davis Love III, Darren Clarke, Charles Howell III and Stuart Appleby are among those who have accepted spots in the invitation-only, 120-man field.

    "Maybe it'll get a little bit better as it gets a little closer, but right now it's real difficult," Woods said.

    Woods made a big-time recruiting attempt of another type Tuesday. With Congressional president Stuart Long at his side, Woods stated repeatedly he would like the historic course to be the tournament's permanent home. Congressional has only committed to host the event this year and next.

    Long soon dashed Woods' hopes by ruling out 2009 and 2011 because the course will host the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Open, respectively, in those years. Beyond that, Long isn't sure whether his members would be willing to give up their course on a yearly basis.

    "I think we'll see how it interrupts everything," Long said. "Fourth of July is a big family week out here. We'll see if it complements and excites that week, or if it's a downer."

    Woods offered some humor about his impending fatherhood. He was asked what he would do if he's on the 18th hole with a one-stroke lead when he gets the word that Elin has gone into labor. "Well, I'll have to play real quick, won't I?" he said. "A 3 will win."

    And, by the way, it seems everyone wants to name Woods' baby. "It's been unreal, name suggestions," Woods said. "Anything and everything. I get a lot of advice about how to play golf from the gallery, but this is infinitely more. It's been very interesting. Everybody always tells their own story, too, of what happened. Sometimes a little more grotesque than I would like to hear -- they still tell it anyway."




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