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Webb
sets sights on Women's British Open Karrie Webb was a 20-year-old
unknown when she first won the Women's British Open, before it was a major championship
and before she had any idea how good she was. That was in 1995. ``I'm
setting goals now that seven years ago I never dreamed of setting,'' Webb said
as she waited for a series of flights that eventually took her to the Ayrshire
coast of Scotland. High goals come with lofty expectations, and Webb agrees
this season hasn't been her best. She has only one victory heading into the British
Open, which starts Thursday on the Ailsa Course at Turnberry. Typically
a fast starter -- 16 of her 27 victories have come before summer -- Webb barely
got out of the blocks before Annika Sorenstam had won five times, including a
major championship, and had virtually wrapped up the player of the year and LPGA
Tour money titles. Where does that leave Webb? ``I'm setting little
goals for the rest of the year,'' she said. ``But when you've achieved so much,
little goals don't seem to mean a lot.'' One big goal that remains is to
win the British Open. At stake is a chance to become the first woman to
win the Super Slam (the Nabisco, U.S. Open, LPGA Championship, British Open and
now-defunct du Maurier Classic), and to join Mickey Wright, the only woman to
have won a major four years in a row. Wright won a major every year from 1958-64. ``It
could still turn out to be a good year,'' Webb said. Her problem is defining
exactly what a great year is. She already has been No. 1 in the world. She
already has won the career Grand Slam, becoming the youngest woman (26) to capture
all four majors. She already has enough points for the LPGA Hall of Fame. Johnny
Miller once said that when he got to the top of the mountain, he looked around
and wondered, ``What now?'' He said the difference between him and Jack Nicklaus
was that Nicklaus reached the top and looked for another mountain. All Webb
sees is Mount Everest. Like so many other great players, she has fallen
into the trap of putting her entire emphasis on the majors at the expense of everything
else. That could lead to boom or bust, with not much in between. She was
tied for the lead going into the final round of the Nabisco Championship, only
to falter Sunday and finish seventh. She was two strokes out of the lead going
into the weekend at the LPGA Championship, but went 72-74 and tied for fourth. Then
came the U.S. Women's Open, where she had a chance to become the first player
to win three in a row. She opened with a 79 and missed the cut. ``I wanted
to play well in the majors. Those are the only tournaments I focused on this year,''
Webb said. ``Apart from making sure my game is progressing, I haven't really focused
on anything else. I might need to change the way I look at the year.'' The
focus wasn't always this narrow. Webb was splitting time between Europe
and the Futures Tour in 1995 when she won the British Open at Woburn over Sorenstam
and Jill McGill. She earned her LPGA card that fall by finishing second at Q-school,
despite playing with a broken bone in her hand. The rest is history. She
sandwiched a victory between two runner-up finishes in her first three LPGA starts,
then closed out her remarkable rookie season with a victory in the LPGA Tour Championship
to become the first woman to surpass $1 million in a year. ``I was going
to give myself until this age to see if I could make it,'' Webb said. ``Yeah,
I wanted to win rookie of the year. But I didn't think I would win four times
and win the money list. I didn't know I could get better, and I did. Not a lot
of people can say they were No. 1, even for a day. I never thought I would be
able to say that.'' She can't be faulted for zeroing in on the majors, the
benchmark of greatness in golf. Webb was only 24 when she was hounded by questions
of what it would take to win the big one, and the answer was swift and decisive. No
one -- not even Tiger Woods -- completed the career Grand Slam as quickly as Webb,
who won all four in a span of eight majors. What next? Staying on
top has been more difficult than getting there. Webb makes no apologies, refusing
to let the game consume her life. She says she is working just as hard now as
when she won seven times and two majors in 2000. The weather in south Florida
was perfect last week, and Webb longed to take her boat out to the Atlantic Ocean.
Instead, she spent two days under a steamy sun, pounding balls to get ready for
the British Open. ``Maybe I would have gone fishing if I'd already won a
couple of majors,'' she said. She can't catch Sorenstam this year, although
there is still one big fish waiting across the pond.
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