
Earlier this week, Annika Sorenstam and Paula Creamer, two of the LPGA's best players, questioned Michelle Wie's decision to tee it up at the Reno-Tahoe Open, a PGA Tour event starting ... now. At this point, we've all heard the complaints: hey, how about winning on the women's tour first? Why is your dad ruining your life? How can you stand to take a spot in the field from someone truly deserving? So on and so forth.
Well, Wie can't answer all her critics -- she'd have to completely give up golf and drop out of school to do that -- but she did respond to the most recent round of disparagements.
"There are going to be criticisms entering this tournament, but at the same time I'm just doing what I feel like I want to do and it's going to be a lot of fun," Wie said.
Well, that does sound like something a teenager might say. Whatever, David Leadbetter, swing coach to the stars, is still concerned.
The public perception is that everybody hates
In any situation, the person that gets the most attention isn't always the most talented. Ask 

It has to be depressing to fire a six-under 65 in the first round of the LPGA Jamie Farr Owens Corning Classic and be five shots back of the leader.
Lorena Ochoa
Unless two female golfers end up fighting each other in a sand trap and clothes get ripped with the camera focused directly on the scuffle, there is no chance this tournament will get as much media attention as the 
Last week 