WINDEMERE, Fla. — Steve Stricker's easy ride into semi-retirement could be coming to a crossroads.
Not that it's been easy lately.
The year began with his older brother, Scott, in the hospital waiting for a liver. He had transplant surgery five days before Stricker made his season debut in the Match Play Championship, and that turned out to be an example of how Stricker was tugged in so many directions that meant so much more than chasing after a golf ball.
"I was power of attorney," he said. "So I got a call that morning before I teed off in my first match. I've got to make a decision whether they can go in and do a procedure because they can't do it without asking me. That was before my first match. That's the kind of stuff that was going on. It got to where my mind wasn't focused. And to play well out here, you have to put everything into being out here."
That was rarely a problem for Stricker, which is why this reduced schedule was so appealing in the first place.
He could neatly package his life into time on the PGA Tour, at home in Wisconsin with his wife and two daughters, with his charity project and time in a deer stand.
When he cut his schedule to 13 events in 2013, Stricker still managed to earn more than $4.4 million, finish No. 3 in the FedEx Cup (worth a $2 million bonus), qualify for the Presidents Cup team and move up 10 spots to No. 8 in the world ranking.
This year was a blur.