http://www.golf.com/golf/tours_news/articl...0070626-1637213</p> <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'></p> You want it to end well, but somehow it doesn't seem it will. Child sports prodigies are a lot like child actors in that everything they do is not so cute once they start growing up.</p> Michelle Wie is growing up, and fast. Just a few weeks ago she was busily filling out a housing application for Stanford, where she plans to live this fall in a dorm with other kids her age.</p> Like her, they're smart and gifted. Unlike her, they don't have $10 million in the bank and golf fans scrutinizing their every move.</p> ...</p> It doesn't seem like five years have passed since Wie first gained notoriety by qualifying for an LPGA event at the age of 12. But she'll be 18 this fall, at which time she legally becomes an adult.</p> That's one of the problems with child prodigies. They always grow up way too fast.</p> </div></p> </p>