USA TODAY US Edition

Golfer reflects on year since revelation

- Tom D’Angelo

BOCA RATON, Fla. – Madelene Sagstrom knows why she did it. She knows why after more than 16 years of living with unimaginab­le emotional pain she decided to reveal to those closest to her that at the age of 7 she had been sexually abused by a male friend in her native Sweden.

And why a year ago she took that story globally on the LPGA’s Drive On campaign, a platform for its members to share their stories.

“If I touch one life by telling my story, it will all be worth it,” she wrote.

One year later, Sagstrom, who is back at Boca Rio this week after winning the 2020 Gainbridge LPGA tournament, knows her story has been shared and has impacted others.

Just as she intended.

“I know it has helped because I have gotten feedback,” she said two weeks ago while at Boca Rio. “People have reached out, which makes it more beautiful for me to know it is actually helping.”

Sagstrom, 29, will be defending her lone LPGA tour title as the event returned to South Florida beginning Thursday after being played in Orlando last year. Her decision to open up to her mentor and longtime friend, profession­al golfer Robert Karlsson, before talking to her parents, was first about healing ... learning not to “hate” herself and ending the cycle of acting like nothing happened before breaking down in tears when alone.

“I despised my body,” she wrote when she made her story public. “I hurt myself mentally and physically. I didn’t know what was wrong with me. That secret haunted me. It haunted me until I could no longer escape it. And the pain showed up in every aspect of my life – especially on the golf course.”

Sagstrom was a rookie on the Symetra Tour, the LPGA’s developmen­tal tour, when she opened up to Karlsson while in Greenwood, South Carolina. She said the instant the words, “I was sexually abused as a child,” came out, she felt like “a weight was lifted.” She awoke the next morning thinking, “I’ve never felt so free my entire life.”

That transforma­tion carried over to her profession­al life and she started playing loose ... and free. The results showed. She won three times on the Symetra Tour, was named its Rookie of the Year and Player of the Year in 2016, and joined the LPGA tour the next season.

Sagstrom’s breakout year was 2020 when she won the Gainbridge and rose to No. 61 in the world. The former LSU standout and Orlando resident was named the Swedish golfer of the year.

But the five-month shutdown following that win at Gainbridge set her back. “I spent five months working on my game, I came back out and I played horrible,” she said.

Going public with her story one year ago was another hurdle, saying it was “very scary.”

“I knew that I would be labeled in a way,” she said in her story. “If you Googled my name, this story of childhood sexual abuse would appear. I’m so grateful for the LPGA and the care they displayed with my story. We had many moments where we were ready to shut it all down just because it was becoming too much.”

Finally, she decided she wanted to be the voice for “somebody who doesn’t want to speak.”

Madelene Sagstrom has, once again, rediscover­ed her game, overcoming not only the COVID-19 shutdown but the emotions and weight of telling her story of sexual abuse.

A second-place finish in the Women’s British Open in August, one shot behind Anna Nordqvist, has helped propel her to No. 42 in the world rankings.

“Life experience­s give you perspectiv­e,” she said two weeks ago. “I’ve always put golf first. Golf has been my main priority in life. It made me realize that I’m more than a golfer. If I accepted both sides of myself and who I am, I played even better.”

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