Our Site
logo

  Sections

Index News & Sports
Classifieds Classifieds
Obituaries Obituaries
Archives Archives
Opinion Opinion
Blogs Blogs
Photos Photo Galleries
Videos Video Center

  Extras

Action! Action! Online
Business Business Directory
Calendar Community Calendar
Crime Crime Prevention
Crime Crime Reports Map
Data Data Center
Front Front Page



  Special Sections

Arkalalah Arkalalah
Election09 Election '09
Sanderholm Jodi Sanderholm
Progress Progress
Thurber Thurber Murder Trial
VORTEX2 VORTEX2

  Sports

ACHS ACHS Bulldogs
Cowley Cowley Tigers
KU Kansas Jayhawks
K-State K-State Wildcats
OU Oklahoma Sooners
OSU O-State Cowboys
WSU Wichita State Shockers

  Site Info

About Us About Us
Advertising Advertising
Subscribe Subscribe

  USA Weekend



 
Google
WWW arkcity.net
Web posted Thursday, December 29, 2005


Annika keeps place at top in women's golf

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Annika Sorenstam is linked with Babe Zaharias again, although this has nothing to do with competing against men.

The Swedish golf star turned a season that had all the trappings of a struggle into another year of superlatives, becoming the first woman in 19 years to capture the first two legs of the Grand Slam, winning 10 times on the LPGA Tour and twice putting the teenagers in their place.

No one is close to her in women's golf.

And she was a landslide winner as the AP Female Athlete of the Year, making Sorenstam the first golfer since Zaharias (1945-47) to win the award three straight years.

''I am flattered and honored to be chosen by so many different editors,'' said Sorenstam, who received 47 of 81 votes cast by AP newspaper and broadcast members.

Danica Patrick, the rookie race car driver whose fourth-place finish at the Indianapolis 500 was the best ever by a female, received 17 votes. Maria Sharapova got five votes for becoming the first Russian-born tennis player to reach No. 1, while Wimbledon champ Venus Williams and 16-year-old golfer Michelle Wie each got four votes.

Zaharias won the AP Female Athlete award six times in her career, one of those years in track. As badly as Sorenstam has beaten up on her competition this decade, maybe it's time for her to try another sport.

''When Annika comes to play, Annika comes to win,'' Lorie Kane said.

It wasn't as easy as it might have looked.

Before she played in her first tournament, Sorenstam filed for divorce from her husband of eight years, a distraction that lingered until it was finalized in August. But she found refuge inside the ropes, adding a few more tournaments than usual, and winning at an alarming rate.

''Golf has been my savior, there's no doubt about that,'' she said.

Sorenstam won the first three tournaments, giving her five straight LPGA Tour victories dating to the end of 2004 to match the record set by Nancy Lopez. And when that streak ended, another began at the majors.

She lapped the field at the Kraft Nabisco Championship, winning by eight shots. She easily won the next major, the LPGA Championship, by three shots over Wie. At the time, Sorenstam had won six of her eight tournaments, and she looked unbeatable.

But her hopes of a Grand Slam evaporated in the mile-high air of Denver when Sorenstam had a three-putt bogey and a four-putt double bogey in a span of four holes in the third round. The letdown was obvious as Sorenstam went into a mini-slump during the summer, although that didn't last long.

''This year, I won some big ones,'' she said. ''Maybe in the summer, I was a little shaky at times. But you know, I dug deeper and I came back when I needed to. I'm very proud of that.''




  Breaking News

Forum

  Advertisers


  Opinion Poll

 Fireworks  
About how much did you spend on fireworks this year?

I didn't buy any fireworks this year.
$1-$25
$26-$50
$56-$100
$101-$150
$151-$200
more than $200

  Weather


  Online Forum

Forum

  Join E-news

Newsletter Signup
The Traveler Online



All Contents ©Copyright The Ark City Traveler
Comments or questions? Contact the webmaster.
Add Arkcity.net to your favorites