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Sorenstam does nothing halfhearted - retirement included

 

CHICAGO (AP) -It was just like Annika Sorenstam to start dropping hints about retiring right after one of the most spectacular seasons in LPGA history.

"I don't think I'll play another 10 years because I have a lot of other interests," she said in November, 2002, a year in which Sorenstam won 13 tournaments and was in contention nearly every week.

Most of the people in women's golf saw a 32-year-old coming into her prime and figured it was simply fatigue talking at the time. One of the few exceptions was Judy Rankin, already a Hall-of-Famer herself and then, as now, a TV analyst. Maybe that's why Rankin's first reaction upon hearing the news Tuesday was, "This would be very much like Annika to get on top and then quit."

Sorenstam has three wins this season and is currently No. 2 in the rankings, trailing recent sensation Lorena Ochoa, after struggling for most of 2007 while recovering from back and neck injuries. But more than Rankin's prescience suggests the Swede will regain the No. 1 spot before the season ends and the rest of her life - starting a family perhaps, pursuing her business and culinary interests for certain - officially begins.

Sorenstam does nothing halfhearted and little else without a plan. Not just the time, but the place she chose for her formal retirement announcement proved that.

It came two days before she tees off at the Sybase Classic in New Jersey, a couple of par-5s from the New York media market. A few hours later, Sorenstam threw out the first pitch at the Mets game and Wednesday, she'll read the "Top Ten List" on the Late Show with David Letterman. In two weeks, she'll play hostess once again at the Ginn Tribute, which should see a nice little bump at the gate.

Lest anyone forget what's most important to her, however, Sorenstam spelled it out again in her news conference.

"Last but not least," she said after thanking her fiancee, caddie, agent, sister, coach, sponsors, friends, reporters and fans, "there's still plenty of golf to be played. "I have another seven months left, and my goal is to win tournaments.

"Many tournaments," she added.

Sorenstam has won 72 already, including 10 majors and a career Grand Slam, been the only woman to shoot 59 and the first in 58 years to compete on the PGA Tour when she played at the Colonial in 2003. She was looking for a challenge then, and when Michelle Wie began taking about qualifying for the PGA Tour, someone asked Sorenstam whether she, too, was interested in playing against the men.

"I haven't thought about qualifying," she said coyly, "but if I got an invite, I would say yes in a heartbeat."

Agent Mark Steinberg's cell phone started ringing almost immediately and soon after that, she settled on Fort Worth.

Sorenstam played with precision and enviable poise the first two days before missing the cut. At her best, finessing her way around a tough golf course that her male counterparts merely overpowered, she turned out to be just good enough to reach the middle of the pack. Trying to hang on at anything less than her best eventually wore her down.

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