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Sorenstam: ‘I’m Not Using The ‘R’ Word’

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

HAIKOU, China (AP) - Annika Sorenstam announced in June that she is “stepping away” from golf at the end of this season, a phrase the 10-time major winner has repeatedly used rather than say she’s retiring.

Now, with a half-dozen events left before she plays the Dec. 11-14 Dubai Ladies Masters — a Ladies European Tour event — Sorenstam is hedging a bit more.

“We’ll see if I will come back in a few years to play,” Sorenstam said Thursday, on the eve of the 54-hole Grand China Air tournament, the first LPGA event in China.

“As of now, I’m leaving the door open. … That’s why I’m not using the ‘R’ word.”

The 38-year-old Swede is getting married in January, and she expects family and business interests to keep her occupied. She designs golf courses, has a clothing line, a charitable foundation and runs a golf academy.

Sorenstam said she won’t miss the “daily grind” of professional golf — the practice, gym sessions and pressure to perform.

“I have done that for so long and I have enjoyed it very much,” she said. “I’ve pushed myself. I’ve enjoyed the journey, but I’ve come to a point now where I’m very happy, I’m very satisfied with what I have achieved.”

Still, Sorenstam clearly has reservations and is choosing her words carefully.

“If I get the urge to come back, I have a chance,” Sorenstam said. “That’s why I have never said this is the end. But we’ll see.

“There are new challenges ahead,” she added. “Getting married and starting a family. Who knows? I might come out on tour sooner than later. It might be tougher than I think it is.”

Sorenstam has won three times this season and heads a 63-player field in China — two-thirds of whom are Asians. And that’s not because the field is stacked because of the location.

Fifty-one players come off the top of the LPGA’s money list. Eight more are Chinese, invited by the Chinese Golf Association. And four others are sponsors’ invitations, three of whom are Chinese. The other sponsors’ invitation is England’s Laura Davies.

Yani Tseng of Taiwan will be among the crowd favorites at the West Coast Golf Club, located on the mainland Chinese island of Hainan — situated between the South China Sea and the Gulf of Tonkin.

In June at the LPGA Championship, Tseng became the first rookie to win a major since South Korean Se Ri Pak in 1998. At 19, she was also the second-youngest woman to win a major. Morgan Pressel — who is also in the China Air field — was 18 when she won the Kraft Nabisco Championship last year.

Another favorite will be 19-year-old Shanshan Feng, an LPGA rookie this season. She is also the only Chinese player on the LPGA tour.

“Chinese golf is getting bigger and bigger. It is getting more and more popular,” Feng said. “China can become another Korea for golf. I believe so. Maybe not now but in the future.”

In the LPGA’s rookie of the year standings, five of the top six are Asians. Tseng is No. 1, followed by South Koreans Na-yeon Choi and Hee-young Park. Japanese Momoko Ueda is No. 4 and Feng is No. 6.

Sorenstam credited Pak with popularizing women’s golf in South Korea, just as Sorenstam benefited from breakthroughs by fellow Swedes Liselotte Neumann and Helen Alfredsson.

“If I would guess what will happen in the next five to 10 years, we’re going to continue to see growth from this part of the world,” Sorenstam said. “I’m sure we’re going to see a lot more Chinese players joining the LPGA.”

Source — FOX Sports

PS3 v2.41 Patch Reinstalls Trophies, In-Game XMB

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

PlayStation 3 owners may be feeling a certain sense of deja vu today. That’s because, as it did last week, this morning Sony announced the release of new firmware, which upgrades the console with two long-desired features. The first is in-game access to the XrossMediaBar (XMB), which will allow users to access limited PS3 features without quitting a game and allow direct access to other features without returning to the main PlayStation menu. The second is the PS3’s long-in-development trophy system, which will award players for in-game feats much like the Xbox 360’s achievement system.

While last week’s v2.40 PS3 firmware update was intended to bestow consoles with both functionalities, it was quickly pulled following reports of freezing consoles. On the official PlayStation Blog, PlayStation Network director Eric Lempel also said that Sony “had to take it offline temporarily because, for a limited number of users, the XMB wouldn’t display after the update was installed.” Today’s v2.41 update–which Lempel promised would arrive “shortly” after his post–has been adjusted to prevent such issues.

Another problem was encountered by some PS3 owners installing the v2.40 software while their controllers were physically plugged into their console–a problem which prevented said controllers from syncing. According to Sony customer support, anyone encountering said problem should perform a hard reset of the controller by pushing a pin or paper clip into a small hole at the controller’s bottom.

For a full rundown of the new firmware upgrade, trophies, and the in-game XMB, check out GameSpot’s previous coverage and GameSpot Hardware Insider’s hands-on preview.

Source — Gamespot