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Golfer Wie making fitness a priority
(AP)
Updated: 2006-01-12 09:34

HONOLULU - For a girl with such grandiose dreams, even Michelle Wie thought the bar was set too high.

Michelle Wie of the U.S. watches a putt on the 18th green of the Waialae Country Club during the Sony Open golf tournament in Oahu, Hawaii January 11, 2006.
It was one of her first exercises late last year with Paul Gagne, a fitness guru who spends most of his time with hockey players, and the task was a simple pull-up. Wie jumped up to grab the bar, and her 6-foot frame dangled in the air for a few seconds before she tried to lift herself. She barely moved a few inches.

When the workout was over, Wie said she was so sore she couldn't lift her arms to wash her hair in the shower.

"It was way too painful," she said. "My New Year's Resolution is to cut down on sugar and not be as lazy. That means going to the gym a lot more. My goal is to get fit, get stronger and prevent injury."

Her ultimate goal remains the same — to play golf against the best in the world.

The next chance comes Thursday in the Sony Open, the first full-field event on the PGA Tour where Wie has become a regular fixture. It will be her seventh time competing against the men, and fourth time on the PGA Tour as she tries to become the first woman since Babe Zaharias in 1945 to make the cut.

But the junior at nearby Punahou School no longer emphasizes getting to the weekend. The older she gets, the farther along in her unique journey, she has paid less attention to results and more on hitting the right shots.

How does she measure success?

"If at the end of the week I felt good about the week, I had a lot of fun and I played as hard as I can," she said.

Her newfound dedication to fitness is one example of Wie seeing a bigger picture.

Swing coach David Leadbetter said her upper body strength was woefully lacking, and he brought in Gagne for help. In the last few months, he said Wie has increased her ball speed about 5 mph to 161 mph, which he compared favorably with the 166 mph ball speed of Justin Rose.

Wie has added about eight pounds of muscle, which Leadbetter says has given her more strength to hold the club in the proper position at the top of the swing.

"Look at what strength training did for Annika (Sorenstam)," Leadbetter said. "Michelle tended to shy away from it. But once we pointed out the benefits, it's a full program she has to work on. When you've got the talent she has, it's a matter of getting your ducks in a row. She's game for it. She's starting to enjoy it."
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