| Armstrong wins 4th straight AP athlete honor(AP)
 Updated: 2005-12-30 11:08
 Lance Armstrong, who won his 
seventh consecutive Tour de France, was honored as The Associated Press Male 
Athlete of the Year for the fourth straight year Wednesday.
 He is the only athlete to be selected by U.S. sports writers four times since 
the honor first was awarded in 1931.
 Armstrong received 30 of the 83 
votes cast. U.S. college gridiron football running back Reggie Bush of the 
University of Southern California was second with 23 votes, and Indianapolis 
Colts quarterback Peyton Manning was third with eight, followed by tennis star 
Roger Federer and golf's Tiger Woods with seven each.
 "It's nice to win," Armstrong said. "I'll never win again.
 "I'd hoped to go out on top. As a sportsman it's really hard to do, to time 
it right."
 The 34-year-old Armstrong retired after deciding there were no more mountains 
to conquer on his bike.
 "I may have to take up golf," he said. "Take on Tiger."
 Armstrong calls his 2005 season "a dream." His final Tour was another 
dominant performance - he won by the comfortable margin of 4 minutes, 40 
seconds. Stepping off the winner's podium for the final time, his goal was to 
kick back "with a beer, having a blast" and play with his three young children 
from his first marriage.
 Also Wednesday, Annika Sorenstam was selected as the AP Female Athlete of the 
Year.
 Sorenstam, who became the first woman in 19 years to capture the first two 
legs of the Grand Slam and won 10 times on the U.S. LPGA Tour, became the first 
golfer since Babe Didrikson Zaharias (1945-47) to win the award three straight 
years.
 "I am flattered and honored to be chosen by so many different editors," said 
Sorenstam, who received 47 of 81 votes cast by U.S. AP newspaper and broadcast 
members.
 Danica Patrick, the rookie race car driver whose fourth-place finish at the 
Indianapolis 500 was the best ever by a female, received 17 votes. Maria 
Sharapova got five votes for becoming the first Russian-born tennis player to 
reach No. 1, while Wimbledon champ Venus Williams and 16-year-old golfer 
Michelle Wie each got four votes.
 
 
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