Listen Live! Link to Schedule Link All Shows Link to Archives
  Home
Search

   
 

WBUR Newsroom
Election 2008
CommonHealth Blog
Radio Boston Blog
Boston Weather
Climate Connections
BBC World News
NPR Top Stories
NPR's Morning Edition
NPR Topics: Books
NPR Topics: Movies
Fresh Air
All Things Considered
Marketplace
Submit a News Tip


RSS Feeds
Podcasts



Littlefield: Retiring Champs
By Bill Littlefield

(l-r) Sports stars Justine Henin and Annika Sorenstam announced their retirements this week. (AP)
(l-r) Sports stars Justine Henin and Annika Sorenstam announced their retirements this week. (AP)
BOSTON, Mass. - May 15, 2008 - This week two champion athletes have announced their retirements: Justine Henin from tennis and Annika Sorenstam from golf.

The news makes WBUR'S sports commentator Bill Littlefield ponder what it must be like to quit while you're ahead...and then have to figure out what to do next.

Audio for this story will be available on WBUR's web site later today.

TEXT OF COMMENTARY:

To be able to go out on top, you have to have gotten to the top.

This week, two women who've achieved that status announced their intentions to leave their games.

Justine Henin is the number one female tennis player in the world...or she was, until she retired, effective immediately, on Wednesday.

Since February, Henin has not advanced past the quarterfinals in any tournament, but in 2007 she won two grand slams, eight other titles, and more than five million dollars.

Henin's announcement took some of the air out of the Tuesday press conference during which Annika Sorenstam revealed that she will retire after the 2008 golf season. Sorenstam is the only woman ever to shoot fifty nine in an LPGA tournament. She's won ten majors and a total of seventy two tournaments on the LPGA tour, most recently last weekend, when she won the Michelob Ultra Open by seven strokes.

Of Sorenstam's decision to retire, Tiger Woods remarked "It's sad to see the greatest female golfer of all time step away from the game."

That sounds like the top to me.

Justine Henin said she no longer has the will to play professional tennis.

Unlike lots of athletes -- even lots of exceptionally successful and wealthy athletes -- Annika Sorenstam seems to have prepared for retirement. She plans to marry and start a family. She has already designed golf courses in China and South Africa as well as in the U.S., and she will apparently continue to do so. She has opened a golf academy in Florida.

Slowed by injuries in 2007, Sorenstam began 2008 by winning the season's first tournament. Then she won a tournament in Florida three weeks ago. Last weekend she lapped the field in Williamsburg, Virginia, finishing twelve spots ahead of Lorena Ochoa.

Mentioning Ochoa's finish is not gratuitous. In 2006 and 2007, she was LPGA Player of the Year. For the previous five seasons, Sorenstam had claimed that distinction. All told, Sorenstam has been player of the year a record eight times, but the point here is that last weekend, she beat the best, and she may very well do that again this summer several times.

Justine Henin, the number one female tennis player, is "simply burned out and has no more juice to go on," according to her agent.

Annika Sorenstam has said this week "I feel great about what I'm doing." It's just that there are a lot of other things she feels even greater about doing, and she feels it's time to begin doing them.

In retirement, may Justine Henin, 25, discover the enthusiasm for life after a pro career that Annika Sorenstam, 37, already seems to have found.



RELATED LINKS


Bill Littlefield's Commentaries

Only A Game Web Site




   From The WBUR Newsroom

Olga Hartzavalos, in Lawrence, lost her clerical job in June and gets $172 a week in unemployment benefits. (Photo: Curt Nickisch)Comparing Jobless Benefits
BOSTON, Mass. (July 25, 2008) As jobless claims rise, people get more unemployment benefits in Massachusetts than in most other states. We compare what it's like for someone in Lawrence with their counterpart across the border in Salem, New Hampshire.
Volunteers hand out free raffle tickets at St. AnnFrom Pump to Pew
BOSTON, Mass. (July 25, 2008) A church in West Bridgewater is giving out free raffle tickets to parishioners. The prize: a 50-dollar gas card...and more people in the pews.
David Mischoulon is a psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital. (Photo: MGH)Strain of Stressful Finances
BOSTON, Mass. (July 25, 2008) The faltering economy puts stress on individuals and families, and may lead to a rise in people with mental health issues. We talk with one doctor from Mass. General about the trend and what to do about it.
Cast and crew explore the set of "As You Like It" on Boston Common. (Photo: Andrea Shea)The Bard is Back in Boston
BOSTON, Mass. (July 25, 2008) The Bard is back: Shakespeare on the Common returns to the outdoor stage with a full schedule of free shows this summer.


spacer
NPR spacer BBC spacer PRI spacer CopyrightBoston UniversityFAQContact UsPrivacy StatementSite Map