China Daily

Rested and ready, Wie eyes No 1

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Michelle Wie believes a rebuilt wrist and a remodeled swing can power her to the top of golf’s world rankings for the first time as she sets out to defend her title at “Asia’s Major” this week.

“Being No 1 in the world is the most important thing to me,” said the 29-year-old American ahead of the $1.5 million HSBC Women’s World Championsh­ip in Singapore, which opens on Thursday and features the world’s top 20 players.

A year ago, Singapore’s Sentosa Golf Club was the scene of one of Wie’s greatest triumphs, but she ended the season undergoing surgery on a painful wrist that caused her to withdraw during the British Open in August.

Wie had been battling arthritis in both wrists, and since the operation last October has reconfigur­ed her swing to limit the pain and prevent long-term damage.

“Definitely after surgery, it’s taken me a long road to be here today,” Wie said on Monday.

“I’m using a little bit more wrist than I did last year but substantia­lly less than I have before, but it’s all about trying to be as pain-free as possible.”

Wie returned to competitio­n at last week’s LPGA Thailand, finishing in a tie for 23rd at 6-under — 16 strokes behind winner Amy Yang of South Korea. Being No 1 in the world is the most important thing to me ... Everything that’s happened in the past, good or bad, has shaped me. I feel like I’ve dealt with a lot of things.” Michelle Wie, ahead of the HSBC Women’s World Championsh­ip Returning from long injury layoff, US star says her best is yet to come

“It felt so good to be back out there playing golf again,” Wie posted on Instagram before flying to Singapore, where 12 months earlier she sealed a one-stroke win with an astonishin­g 45-foot birdie putt on the last hole — followed by an emotional scream and a fist pump.

“That whole day, I was behind,” recalled Wie of her first title since the 2014 US Women’s Open which remains her only major victory.

‘Pretty awesome’

“I knew I had to make birdies and then I was on the last hole, and I saw the big leaderboar­d on the 18th. I was like ‘Wow! If I birdie this hole... I could possibly win.’

“I knew I had to make it. I hit the ball pretty hard. I was like, ‘I’m not leaving this short!’ It was a lot of emotions and it was pretty awesome.”

At just 13 years old, Wie shot to prominence in 2003 when she was the youngest player, male or female, to win an adult USGA event.

She followed up by becoming the youngest to make the cut at the US Women’s Open the same year.

She turned pro just before her 16th birthday, with many predicting she would go on to dominate the women’s game for years to come.

But despite huge publicity and multi-million dollar sponsorshi­p deals, Wie has had limited success as the constant pressure and a succession of injuries took their toll.

“Everything that’s happened in the past, good or bad, has shaped me,” said Wie. “I feel like I’ve dealt with a lot of things.”

The 2014 season finally saw her fulfill her early promise with wins at the US Open and LPGA Lotte Championsh­ip, 11 other top-10 finishes and a rise to a career-high No 5 in the world rankings.

The injury layoff has seen Wie’s world ranking slip to No 32, but she has set her sights firmly on getting to the top.

“Hopefully the best is yet to come,” Wie said.

“I don’t think that I have reached my full potential.”

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