2000 Jamie Farr winner Sorenstam to retire this year

5/13/2008
ASSOCIATED PRESS
  • 2000-Jamie-Farr-winner-Sorenstam-to-retire-this-year

    Annika Sorenstam fails to coax in a putt on No. 10 during the first round of the Jamie Farr Classic at Highland Meadows Golf Club on July 13, 2006.

  • Annika Sorenstam fails to coax in a putt on No. 10 during the first round of the Jamie Farr Classic at Highland Meadows Golf Club on July 13, 2006.
    Annika Sorenstam fails to coax in a putt on No. 10 during the first round of the Jamie Farr Classic at Highland Meadows Golf Club on July 13, 2006.

    Annika Sorenstam will retire after the season, ending an LPGA Tour career in which she has won 72 tournaments to date and delivered a defining moment when she teed it up against the men on the PGA Tour.

    She was to announce her decision at a news conference Tuesday at the Sybase Classic in Clifton, N.J., a person familiar with her plans told The Associated Press.

    The 37-year-old Sorenstam has hinted at retirement the past several seasons, saying she wanted to devote more time to her growing business and to start a family. She is engaged to Mike McGee, son of former PGA Tour player Jerry McGee.

    This would be very much like Annika to get on top and then quit, said Judy Rankin, a Hall of Famer and television analyst.

    Sorenstam won the 2000 Jamie Farr Classic at Highland Meadows Golf Club in Sylvania. She topped Rachel Teske in a playoff with a birdie on the second extra hole. Sorenstam finished 10 under par for the tournament (70-67-66-71--274) and won $150,000.

    Annika Sorenstam speaks during a press conference at Highland Meadows Golf Club on July 12, 2006.
    Annika Sorenstam speaks during a press conference at Highland Meadows Golf Club on July 12, 2006.

    The decision comes two days after Sorenstam won the Michelob Ultra Open at Kingsmill by seven shots for her third victory of the season, and first against a field that included Lorena Ochoa. It was a sign that Sorenstam had fully recovered from injuries and was poised to make a strong big at recapturing her stature as the best in women s golf.

    I just hope to continue this momentum, Sorenstam said after winning. I m feeling it. It s turning around, and so I can t wait for the next month or so to come with big tournaments, and I m excited.

    Sorenstam dominated women s golf like few others, especially during a five-year period when she won 43 times and finished among the top three nearly 70 percent of the time. But for all her achievements the only woman to shoot 59, 10 majors and one of six women to complete the career Grand Slam she became most famous for testing herself against the men.

    Sorenstam became the first woman in 58 years to complete on the PGA Tour when she played at the Colonial in 2003. She missed the cut, but earned worldwide respect for the way she handled herself amid massive scrutiny.

    She won LPGA Tour player of the year a record eight times, including five straight seasons until Ochoa ended the streak in 2006. Sorenstam was ineffective most of 2007, the first time in 12 years she failed to win on the LPGA Tour, as she recovered from back and neck injuries.

    She won the first tournament of the year in Hawaii, picked up a playoff victory in South Florida three weeks ago, then continued a slow rise up the world ranking toward Ochoa with a dominant victory in Virginia.

    But when asked Sunday if she would defend her title at Kingsmill, Sorenstam hedged.

    I hope so, she said. I m going to continue this year the way I started it and at the end of the year. I always assess it like I have the last few years. At this point, I feel great about what I m doing.