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Annika’s Way

Annika Sörenstam—the longtime world No. 1 and 10-time major champ—helped pave the way for the LPGA’s current success. Kingdom was privileged to welcome Sörenstam to the 2023 Kingdom Cup on Hilton Head Island, and she spoke to Robin Barwick about growing up outside Stockholm, Sweden, where age and gender didn’t figure on the golf course. If you wanted a game, nothing else mattered.

Annika’s Way

Annika Sörenstam—the longtime world No. 1 and 10-time major champ—helped pave the way for the LPGA’s current success. Kingdom was privileged to welcome Sörenstam to the 2023 Kingdom Cup on Hilton Head Island, and she spoke to Robin Barwick about growing up outside Stockholm, Sweden, where age and gender didn’t figure on the golf course. If you wanted a game, nothing else mattered.

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Were you and your sister, Charlotta, the only girls at Bro Balsta Golf Club?
If there were any others, they really didn’t go out and play, or practice or hang out. I played other sports, but particularly in the summers, the golf club is where we spent all of our time.

And you would go swimming for golf balls, right?
That’s right! It was hot in the summer, so we would swim in the lake to cool down, and we would also pick up golf balls. The golf club was our playground. We would be there for 12 hours a day, so we would come up with different things to do, and we would just have fun there every day. I look back on those days very fondly.

Did it bother you that there were so few female golfers around?
No, the way I looked at it was: if you want to play, then let’s go. We were always welcome, we always kept up, we accepted whoever else was there and vice versa. I don’t even remember being separated by age. We would just turn up and play. We never saw any divisions.

Charlotta and I were very competitive, and if we got beaten by anyone it didn’t deter us; it made us want to get better.

Who were your role models?
There was not a lot of golf on TV in Sweden, and there was no social media, but I would see the magazines in the clubhouse. So I wanted to have power off the tee like Greg Norman, I wanted to have the imagination of Seve Ballesteros, the perfect swing of Nick Faldo, the determination of Bernhard Langer, and the charisma of Arnold Palmer! Then there was Jack [Nicklaus], who seemed to have it all!

Eventually, I would see coverage of Nancy Lopez and Patty Sheehan, with her very classic swing. I picked out the best parts of the games of these stars and wanted to put them all together into my own game.

When you were 17, it must have made a strong impression when Sweden’s Liselotte Neumann, just four years older than you, won the 1988 U.S. Women’s Open.
That was a big moment for me, even though I didn’t know Liselotte at that point. Here was a countrywoman winning the U.S. Women’s Open, and it felt close. I knew the golf course that she grew up playing, and I knew friends of hers, and she showed that it was possible for a Swede to win the U.S. Open. She came from a similar background to me, and yet she won the biggest tournament in women’s golf.

The morning after Liselotte won, I went to the shop and there was this big newspaper headline: “Lotte Won!” I stood there and stared at this headline. It was just so cool, and that is when I started to dream. From that moment, I knew it was possible.

It has been 20 years since you played against the men on the PGA Tour at Colonial. What was your motivation at the time?
It was an opportunity for me to get better. It was exactly what I needed to push myself a little bit extra. Playing golf with my male contemporaries was nothing new to me. I just thought: let’s go, toughen me up, I don’t mind.

The media built up your appearance as a battle of the sexes. How did you see it?
A woman had not played on the men’s tour for 58 years, but I didn’t go out there to prove that women are as good as men. I had been number
one in the world for a while, yet felt I hadn’t reached my full potential.

Some people didn’t agree with me playing, but that’s life. It was not going to stop me reaching for my goals. I also know that some people took inspiration from it, and that it helped them to find ways to improve their own situations, and that is so much bigger than a chip and a putt. Sometimes you can turn sport into something much bigger than just trying to score.

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Sörenstam lifts the U.S. Open trophy for the first time, in 1995.

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