MICHELLE WIE SAYS SHE´S FEELING STRONGER
DESPITE ONGOING WRIST PROBLEMS
Fallen star Michelle Wie says she has come to terms with the fact that her injured wrists will never be the same as they once were.
"I just accepted the fact that they are never going to be 100 percent ever again. After a major injury last year, it's never going to be the way it was before," she said as she prepared for the LPGA Tour's Fields Open, which begins on Thursday.
The 18-year-old Wie said she's accepted that her wrists are as good as they can be.
"Obviously, it's not 110 percent, but I feel pretty healthy," she said. "I feel a lot stronger. I feel like I can be a lot more aggressive with the ball. I feel more like an athlete right now."
Wie is starting the season on her Hawaii home island of Oahu for the fifth straight year on a sponsor's exemption. This time, she's playing against women.
She injured both wrists last year but kept playing, and struggling. She made only three cuts. In nine starts, she withdrew twice and only broke par twice in 19 rounds against women.
Wie said she didn't want to talk too much about 2007.
"Last year already happened. Talking about last year is not going to change anything," she said. "Obviously, if somebody invented a time machine, I would go back and try to change a couple of things. But talking about it changes nothing. My goal this year is to stay in the present ... and just enjoy life."
DESPITE ONGOING WRIST PROBLEMS
Fallen star Michelle Wie says she has come to terms with the fact that her injured wrists will never be the same as they once were.
"I just accepted the fact that they are never going to be 100 percent ever again. After a major injury last year, it's never going to be the way it was before," she said as she prepared for the LPGA Tour's Fields Open, which begins on Thursday.
The 18-year-old Wie said she's accepted that her wrists are as good as they can be.
"Obviously, it's not 110 percent, but I feel pretty healthy," she said. "I feel a lot stronger. I feel like I can be a lot more aggressive with the ball. I feel more like an athlete right now."
Wie is starting the season on her Hawaii home island of Oahu for the fifth straight year on a sponsor's exemption. This time, she's playing against women.
She injured both wrists last year but kept playing, and struggling. She made only three cuts. In nine starts, she withdrew twice and only broke par twice in 19 rounds against women.
Wie said she didn't want to talk too much about 2007.
"Last year already happened. Talking about last year is not going to change anything," she said. "Obviously, if somebody invented a time machine, I would go back and try to change a couple of things. But talking about it changes nothing. My goal this year is to stay in the present ... and just enjoy life."
Labels: Pro Ladies
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