Michelle Wie hits an approach shot in Wednesday's pro-am at Ottawa Hunt Club. Michelle Wie hits an approach shot in Wednesday's pro-am at Ottawa Hunt Club. (Tom Hanson/Canadian Press)

Michelle Wie fended off yet another round of criticism before her final LPGA Tour appearance of the year in the Canadian Women's Open at Ottawa's Hunt Club.

"Everyone has their own opinion of what I should do," Wie said. "But I think that it is my life.

"I know there might be wrong decisions that I make and there might be right decisions that I make. But they're decisions that I make for myself, and I think the only decision I can make is to be 100 per cent supportive of myself and not doubt myself at all."

Wie, down to No. 309 in the world, is using the last of her six sponsor exemptions for the season.

She needs to win or finish second at Ottawa to avoid a trip to Q-school, if she decides to try qualifying.

"I have not really decided anything yet," Wie said. "I think planning what is going to happen next year or this fall is going to happen after this week.

"Right now, all I'm thinking about is how am I going to play good this week. How am I, maybe, going to possibly win this?"

Asked if she would consider Q-school, Wie replied: "I'm not going to think about the future right now."

In her last start, Wie missed the cut in the PGA Tour's Reno event with rounds of 73 and 80.

In the State Farm Classic in her last LPGA Tour start, the 18-year-old Stanford student was disqualified for failing to sign her second-round scorecard.

"I kind of feel sad for her," said Helen Alfredsson, winner of this year's Evian Masters.

"I kind of feel sad for the guidance that she seems to not have in the right direction. If she wants to be a golfer, she should really concentrate on the being on the women's tour and dealing with them and learning to win."

Canadian swansong for Sorenstam?

Annika Sorenstam, winner of the 2001 Canadian Women's Open at Angus Glen, north of Toronto, is making perhaps her final tournament appearance in Canada.

The 37-year-old Swede, a three-time winner this year, announced May 13 that this year would be her last on tour, that she will be married in January [to Mike McGee, her manager] and hopes to start a family, as well as tend to her golf academy and business interests.

She admits that her mind now sometimes drifts away from the golf course.

"If I will come back in the future, I guess time will tell," Sorenstam said Wednesday. "In my announcement, I said I was stepping away.

"I never used the R-word [retirement]. That gave me an opening.

"But I don't have a timeframe. I have a lot on my plate, and I'm excited about the next chapter."

Sorenstam will open Thursday in a threesome with LPGA Championship winner Yani Yseng and U.S. Women's Open champion Inbee Park, both 19.

Lorena Ochoa, who won the tournament last year at Edmonton's Royal Mayfair, will play with Se Ri Pak and Seon Hwa Lee.

Charlottetown's Lorie Kane and Hamilton's Alena Sharp are the top Canadians in the field.