Skip navigation
Favorites
Sign up to follow your favorites on all your devices.
Sign up

Wie Begins Third Stint on PGA Tour Stage

SILVIS, Ill. -- With her sparkly chandelier earrings and the wells and you knows sprinkled liberally throughout her conversations, Michelle Wie could be any other 15-year-old girl.

Get her on the golf course, though, and Wie becomes something special. No matter her age, or what tour shes playing.

She walks high. Her mannerisms are very mature. Shes very, very classy. Very professional. Shes funny. Shes generous. Shes nice, said Zach Johnson, who played a practice round with Wie on Tuesday.

46727.ashx

Michelle Wie hopes to improve on her Sony Open performance when she missed the cut by seven strokes.

When youre standing behind her behind the ropes and youre seeing her hit a golf shot, youre like, Wow, she hit it just as far as so-and-so or just as straight as so-and-so, Johnson said, awe in his voice. And shes 15. Its unbelievable.

Welcome to the wonderful world of Wie.

Shes already proven this summer that she can hang with the big

girls, finishing second at the LPGA Championship and sharing the third-round lead at the U.S. Open. Now she has her sights set on the men, making her third venture onto the PGA Tour at this weeks John Deere Classic.

Ever since I was very young, I wanted to play with the guys, she said. I had a choice of playing softball or baseball. I played baseball. I think thats just my characteristic.

Wie has been occasionally playing on the LPGA Tour since she was 12, so her appearances at those tournaments no longer causes a ruckus. In addition to being runner-up to Annika Sorenstam at the LPGA Championship, she was second at the SBS Open. Shes yet to win an LPGA event, but still she would already have earned about $300,000 and been top 25 on the money list this year if she wasnt an amateur.

But the PGA Tour is a different story. Sorenstam was the first woman in almost 60 years to play on the PGA Tour when she teed it up at The Colonial in 2003, and only Suzy Whaley and Wie have joined her since. No woman has made a 36-hole cut in a PGA Tour event since Babe Zaharias did it at the 1945 Los Angeles Open, though Wie missed by just one stroke at the 2004 Sony Open. She missed the cut by seven strokes at this years Sony Open.

Wie is playing in the mens U.S. Amateur Public Links next week at Shaker Run in Lebanon, Ohio.

I feel like I have nothing to lose, she said. Basically, Im the underdog here, so Im just going to have a lot of fun.

Wie is well aware there are people who think she has no business here, that she should stick to the LPGA Tour. Or, better yet, junior events. But she and her parents mapped out this plan long ago, and shes sticking to it.

She still wants to go to Stanford, but her long-term goal is to play on the mens tour. Nothing against the women, she wants to beat them, too. But playing the men is a different challenge.

There are some people that are always against me, she said. But, you know, I just have to realize that Im having a lot of fun, and this is what I want to do. And Im not going to stop just for them.

Some of the objections stem from her use of sponsor exemptions. If Wie really wants to play, critics say, she should try qualifying like Whaley did.

But Wie sees it a different way.

If someone says, Here you go, heres $100, I mean, would you rather work for it or would you just get it? she asked. I mean, that makes sense to me. I mean, I dont know about anyone else, but I like the easy way in.

And Wie is hardly the first person to get sponsors exemptions.

If the sponsors want to get a crowd, thats what they do,

Tiger Woods said last week. I got an exemption when I was 16, too.

For Deere Classic organizers, giving Wie an exemption wasnt even a question.

Tournament director Clair Peterson extended an invitation for last years tournament after she barely missed the cut at the 2004 Sony, but the timing didnt work. When Wies parents called Peterson this spring, he was happy to make the offer again.

Because the Deere Classic falls on the week before the British Open, most of the big names skip it. With the addition of Wie, though, it becomes a must-watch event. Ticket sales are brisk, and 93 media organizations requested credentials, an increase of about 30 percent from last year.

Shes accomplished a tremendous amount in golf already, Peterson said. Shes a huge talent and people are interested in seeing that. That really was our first consideration.

Besides, Johnson said, talent is talent.

Throw sex aside, you have a phenomenal talent, Johnson said.

They dont come around very often. Theres only so many Michelle Wies, Tiger Woodses, Michael Jordans, whoever it is. ... I just think its a win-win situation on both the Wie side and the tournament side, through and through.

Related Links:

  • Tee Times
  • Full Coverage - John Deere Classic