As retirement nears, Lexi Thompson unpacks highs, lows of a golf life lived in full

“I don’t think there’s anything really for me to prove,” Thompson says. “I’m forever grateful for being able to play golf for a living. But a lot of people don’t see the lonely times — going through the airport alone, going to the hotel alone with four or five bags and performing, then being alone. Good or bad, you don’t have someone to share it with most of the time.”
Thompson’s yearning for a break from the isolating grind of pro golf is understandable. She first entered the public consciousness as a prodigious 12-year-old qualifier at the 2007 U.S. Women’s Open, and she hasn’t missed a national championship since. At 16, she won her first LPGA title and successfully petitioned the LPGA for membership. More wins followed, including her first and, to date, only major championship: the Kraft Nabisco Championship (now the Chevron Championship) in 2014.
Thompson — who grew up in nearby Coral Springs in a household of competitive golfers (both of her brothers, Nicholas and Curtis, have had modest pro careers) shepherded by her parents, Scott and Judy — was an American darling from the moment she entered the pro scene, inspiring legions of young fans with her dazzling looks, bombs off the tee and a seemingly infinite willingness to sign autographs and engage with fans.

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