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Webb leads in season's
first Major
Karrie Webb expects to have
some bad days on the golf course. The rest of the LPGA Tour hasn't seen too much
of that.
Webb had five birdies en
route to a 5-under 67 and a one-shot lead over defending champion Dottie Pepper
in today's opening round of the Nabisco Championship, the LPGA's first major
of the year.
"I'm in some sort of zone,"
said Webb, who has three LPGA victories and another non-tour win this season.
"I have a lot of belief in my game right now. It was just good to see some good
iron shots and some putts go in."
Webb's bid to become the
first golfer in 22 years to win four consecutive LPGA tournaments ended with
a second-place finish last week at Phoenix.
"I don't expect to play
well all the time," she said. "I know there's going to be bad days and I just
have to try and make them as good as possible."
Seeing Webb's name atop
the leaderboard might intimidate some players, but Pepper takes it as a good
sign.
"As long as you see a good
number up there, you know the golf course can give something up," she said. "Certainly
it helps not to dig yourself a hole, but she's human, too, and she's not finished
tournaments so strongly and other people have."
Pepper did just that today.
She birdied three of the final four holes for a 68 and was one of four players
within three shots of Webb. She shot a tournament-record 19-under 269 to win
by six strokes last year.
"I finished my round like
you're supposed to finish a round," she said. "I hung in there and I was very
patient with myself all day. That's what it takes to play well on this golf course
under these conditions."
Rachel Hetherington, a
two-time winner in the last 14 months, was third with a 69. She and Webb were
frequent competitors as juniors in their native Queensland, Australia.
"I've known her for so
long that I don't feel intimidated by her game or the way she plays," Hetherington
said. "If anything, it helps you because you've got to improve your game and
raise it to another level to be competitive out here."
That's a feeling Beth Daniel
doesn't have much anymore.
Daniel, who will be inducted
into the LPGA Hall of Fame next month, and Barb Whitehead, whose only tour victory
was five years ago, each shot 70.
"I don't feel like I have
to really prove anything out there anymore. I'm certainly not as intense as I
once was," Daniel said. "I still want to play golf and I still feel like I'm
capable of winning, but I'm really, really having a hard time drawing up that
fire at times."
Daniel missed seven greens,
so she spent much of her round getting up and down in only her second tournament
since taking a month off.
Laura Davies led five players
at 71. Amateur Beth Bauer, a sophomore at Duke, was one of five players at par-72.
Swede Annika Sorenstam
stumbled to a 4-over 76 that included a double-bogey on the par-3, 164-yard fifth,
where she hit her tee shot into the water. She played the front nine 4-over,
but came back at even-par.
Aree and Naree Song Wongluekiet,
the 13-year-old twin sisters from Thailand who are the second-youngest ever to
play in an LPGA tournament, shot better than Juli Inkster and Nancy Lopez. Naree
had a 74 and Aree shot 75. Each sister played the back nine in even par.
Naree said the conditions
were more difficult than in junior tournaments.
"There's no rough in junior
golf and the putting surface is very fast," she said. "I started off very poorly.
I couldn't keep it in the fairway. In the middle of the round, I started playing
decent and my putting was quite good."
Webb hit 16 greens on the
6,520-yard, par-72 Dinah Shore course at Mission Hills Country Club under sunny,
warm and relatively calm conditions.
She went home Wednesday
unhappy with the way she played in the two-day pro-am, and showed up early today
to practice.
"The confidence is a big
thing for me right now. On the first tee, everything that happened the past two
days pretty much vanished," she said. "I hit a good swing on my first drive,
hit the middle of the fairway and never looked back from there."
Webb's trickiest moment
came on the par-4, 385-yard 12th.
Her second shot hit a tree
branch on the left side of the fairway, then bounced across and hit the base
of a tree before coming to rest back in the fairway. Unruffled, she landed her
third shot 12 feet from the pin and salvaged a par.
"Someone who's not working
with a lot of confidence might not get it up and down there," she said. "I didn't
put myself into danger of making too many mistakes."
Despite the favorable conditions,
several big names couldn't make a run at Webb. Se Ri Pak, playing with Sorenstam,
had a 1-over 73. Meg Mallon, playing with Webb, finished with a 75. Juli Inkster,
a two-time Nabisco winner, had a 76 and Nancy Lopez, who won in 1981 before the
tournament became a major, struggled to a 78.
DIVOTS: If Sorenstam
seems to be smiling more, it's because she finally got her braces off. "Now I
can eat whatever I want," she said. The braces distracted her during photo shoots
and commercials. "I wanted to keep my lips together. It might have looked like
I was bored, but I just didn't want to show my metal." ... The tournament has
dropped Dinah Shore's name from its title six years after the singer's death.
It's the first time her name isn't on the event since Colgate began the Dinah
Shore Winner's Circle tournament in 1972. Pepper agreed with the change. "You're
getting into a situation where someone's going to win this tournament and say,
'Who's Dinah Shore?"' she said. "That's really sad, but at the same time you
have to move forward and recognize what she did for women's golf." ... There
were prominent reminders of Shore. A bronze statue of her waving and carrying
a golf club, sculpted by her first husband, George Montgomery, stands at the
18th green. A wall of champions borders the lake at the hole, listing past winners
and their totals, and Shore's name is on a merchandise tent near the clubhouse.
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