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If you’re going to take a curtain call for a career, you could choose worse places than Pebble Beach Golf Links to do it. Michelle Wie West had played just two LPGA events in the previous 24 months, but was excited to compete one last time, the US Women’s Open making its debut on the Monterey Peninsula, before closing out a memorable career. At 33, she has already begun focusing on life outside the ropes after spending more than two decades making headlines inside them.

Indeed, it’s almost hard to believe just how young Wie West was when she started attracting attention with her game. It was back in 2000, when the Hawaii native was only 10, that she first made national news in becoming the youngest player ever to qualify for the US Women’s Amateur Public Links.

In subsequent years, Wie West showcased her talent by achieving several notable “youngest ever” accomplishments in various women’s amateur and professional events, while also competing against the best male amateur and professional golfers in the world by playing in a handful of PGA Tour events. Critics wondered if she might be better served beating up on players her own age to learn “how to win” a la Tiger Woods. But Wie West gained satisfaction and experience testing herself in other ways. And she did her fair share of winning along the way, grabbing five LPGA titles including her signature victory at the 2014 US Women’s Open.

With several impressive moments during her career to choose from, we’ve highlighted 11 that serve as the most memorable—most for the better—of Wie West’s career.

When the teen became a phenom

Robert Laberge

The Kraft Nabisco Championship always loved inviting amateurs into the LPGA major, but took a chance in 2003 when inviting a 13-year-old Wie, who recently had become the youngest player to earn a spot into an LPGA event. Wie made tournament officials look smart when she became the youngest player ever to make a cut in an LPGA event. A third-round 66 put her in the final pairing in the final round. She finished T-9 to earn low amateur honours. It was her first of six top-10s in the major in her career, three of which would come before age 16.

A national champion

Less than three months later, playing in the US Women’s Amateur Public Links, Wie advanced to the finals at Ocean Hammock Golf Club in Florida. When she defeated former NCAA champion Virada Nirapathpongporn in the final, she became the youngest golfer to win a USGA championship that had no age restrictions.

Making waves on the PGA Tour

Al Messerschmidt

Having wowed several tour pros the previous year with her swing when she competed in the pro-am at the Sony Open—earning the nickname the “Big Wiesy” after Ernie Els sung her praises—Wie did more of the same while playing in the PGA Tour event on a sponsor’s exemption. She missed out on becoming just the second woman (along with Babe Didrickson Zaharias) to make a cut in a PGA Tour event but her second-round 68 was the lowest shot by a woman on the PGA Tour. This was the first of eight starts she made on the PGA Tour and also the closest she came to making the cut.

Working for a Masters invite

John Mummert/USGA

In an April 2004 interview with “60 Minutes,” Wie didn’t beat around the bush: “I think my ultimate goal is to play in the Masters. I think it’d be pretty neat walking down the Masters fairways.” One of the ways to qualify was to win the US Amateur Public Links title. So Wie entered the event in 2005 (which was open to men and women), earned a spot in the championship, then advanced into the match-play bracket. Wie got all the way to the quarterfinals before falling to Clay Ogden (above), the eventual winner.

A pro at Sweet 16

Given all her success as an amateur in professional events, and the following she had in and out of golf, it was only a matter of time before Wie would turn pro. She did so a week before her 16th birthday in October 2005, and signed sponsorship deals with Nike and Sony worth a reported $10 million per year.

An auspicious debut

Wie West made her pro debut at the Samsung World Championship in California, seemingly finishing in fourth place and earning around $50,000. However, officials determined that she had taken a bad drop a day earlier and because she had signed for an incorrect score, she was disqualified from the tournament.

First pro win

Kevin C. Cox

Wie wasn’t a full-time LPGA member until earning her tour card in late 2008. Less than a year later, she claimed her first LPGA title, winning the Lorena Ochoa Invitational in Mexico by two strokes.

Getting her diploma

Donald Miralle

You could make the argument the most impressive thing Wie ever accomplished on the LPGA Tour was simultaneously going to college at Stanford starting in September 2007 and earning a degree. She took classes between LPGA events. It provided meaning and purpose for her, in a way perhaps golf couldn’t. And it was definitely an outlet to let Wie be defined by something other than golf. She wrapped up classes in March 2012 and attended graduation in Palo Alto that June.

A major milestone

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Given all the laurels she earned as an amateur and the talent she displayed, big wins on the LPGA Tour were naturally expected. It wasn’t until 2014, however, that those expectations were fulfilled at Pinehurst No. 2. Playing a week after Martin Kaymer won the men’s title on the Donald Ross course, Wie was the only woman to break par, beating Stacy Lewis by two shots to claim the biggest title in women’s golf.

Disappointment at Hazeltine

Not long after her US Women’s Open title, Wie experienced the first of a series of injuries. She would sit out stretches of seasons to heal, with hopes that the rest would finally pay off. But often it didn’t, and the frustrations boiled over. They hit their hottest in 2019 at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship, when she shot a first-round 84 at Hazeltine National after a nine-month layoff entering the event. “It’s just one of those situations where I’m not, you know, I’m not entirely sure how much more I have left in me,” she said at the time, “so even on the bad days I’m just like trying to take time to enjoy it. But it’s tough.” After missing the cut, she took the next 21 months off, during which time she got married to Jonnie West and had a baby.

Return to play as a mom

Nine months after the birth of daughter Makenna, Wie West entered the Kia Classic, the first of six tournaments she played in 2021. She missed the cut by four, but sounded enthused to be competing again and proud of the example she could set for her new child.

“After KPMG in 2019 I thought I was done, especially when I found out I was pregnant later that year,” she said. “I thought that cemented it. I thought there was no chance of coming back. And I told my husband that. He was like, ‘No, no, just think it through.’ But then we found out that Makenna was going to be a girl and that just changed my perspective on everything. It was crazy how just that one little fact changed everything.”

Post-golf life

Michelle Wie West poses with AJGA winner Yana Wilson and LPGA champ Rose Zhang after their victories at the Mizuho Americas Open at Liberty National last month, a tournament that Wie West helped launch. Elsa

Injuries and homelife, however, began to take a toll and so just prior to the 2022 US Women’s Open, Wie West announced that her playing career would come to an end after Pine Needles, with the exception of one more start a year later at Pebble Beach.

“I’m so grateful for the past 14 years I spent on tour, travelling the world and competing against the best in the game. Excited to spend more time now on projects that I always wanted to do but never had time for and to continually work to help golf become a more diverse and inclusive space.”

It didn’t take her long to get to work, helping start a new LPGA Tour event, the Mizuho Americas Open, at Liberty National Golf Club outside New York that incorporated a separate tournament for AJGA players. (The event got extra publicity when Rose Zhang won the title in her first start as a pro). Wie West also co-hosts a podcast with Golf Digest’s Hally Leadbetter.

“I hope that I inspire a lot of other girls to make bold and fearless decisions and choices in their careers as well,” Wie West said earlier this week. “I continue to want to help the tour grow female sports in general and do everything in my power to keep empowering the women, closing the pay gap, whether it’s in sports and out of sports,” Wie West said.