For most of her
life, however, she seemed to be on a very different path than one marked by
world records and teeing off with Tiger Woods. As a child, Mullins excelled at
a variety of sports, training in swimming, volleyball, tennis and athletics. It was at one of the many sports camps her mother sent her
to that she also first tried her hand at golf. “Back then, I already loved
hitting the ball,” she recalls. “But I hated being in the sun, I hated
endlessly traipsing around and being the only girl. There was no way I was ever
going to become a golfer”, she recalls.
Instead,
she followed in the footsteps of her father, who was a track athlete and also held a world record. Troy wasn’t short on talent in that department, either. At
the age of eight, she was already competing against teenagers. During her
senior year at high school, she transitioned from sprinter to heptathlete. Troy
competed for two years at Cornell University where she majored in China and
Asia-Pacific studies together with international relations. As someone always
looking for the next challenge, she learned to speak Mandarin fluently.
A chance visit to a
driving range in Los Angeles was all it took to spark a new passion. “I was
instantly hooked on hitting the ball,” she says. It came as an epiphany she
wanted to become a pro golfer and she didn’t intend to waste any time getting
there. “My family didn't quite understand my impromptu and lofty goals.”
Nevertheless, Troy’s plan worked. “Three years after I hit my first ball, I was
competing in amateur tournaments,” she says. She came in second place at her
first long drive event. “Despite her early success, she says, “I’m still
figuring out how to be a golf professional.”