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Webb extends lead to
three
It took nearly 5 1/2 hours
for Karrie Webb to extend her dominance in the Nabisco Championship.
Webb birdied the first
three holes to shoot a 2-under 70 for a 137 total and a three-shot lead over
Dottie Pepper after today's second round of the LPGA's first major of the year.
Webb followed her fast
start by parring nine straight holes before bogeying the par-4, 403-yard 13th.
Then her threesome got stuck waiting behind another group on the 17th at Mission
Hills Country Club in a round that barely beat darkness.
"That's the toughest par-3
on the golf course and you've got to stand there," she said. "It's not much fun.
You've got to stay patient and try and stay focused."
Webb didn't. She bogeyed
the 171-yard 17th, where the pin was in the back left of the green, to fall back
to 6-under. She made up on the 18th with her fourth birdie of the day.
"I'm going to have to play
extremely well to win," she said. "I don't think by any means that the tournament's
in the bag for me."
Pepper posted a par-72
for a 4-under 140 total to remain in second. She was 6-under after birdies at
the 11th and 14th, but lost ground with three straight bogeys on Nos. 15-17.
"Nothing wonderful happened
and nothing terrible happened," she said. "Even par never hurts you."
Chris Johnson shot a 68
to move into third at 141. Canadian Lorie Kane was alone at 142 with a 71 and
Trish Johnson was at 143 after a 71.
Pat Hurst, the '98 Nabisco
winner, Se Ri Pak and Sherri Steinhauer were tied at 144.
Aree Song Wongluekiet,
who should have been in school studying algebra, English and Spanish, created
the day's excitement.
The 13-year-old Wongluekiet
(pronounced Wahn-gloo-KEE-it) shot a 1-under 71 and made the cut with a 2-over
146 total -- one stroke behind former U.S. Open champion Laura Davies and nine
back of Webb.
Aree and her twin sister,
Naree, are the second-youngest ever to compete in an LPGA tournament.
"I expected to make the
cut. It was one of my goals," said Aree, who along with her sister, dominated
the junior circuit in the last half of 1999.
Naree didn't fare as well
as her sister, failing to make the cut after an 82 that included one birdie,
a double bogey and seven bogeys. She finished at 12-over 156.
"I'm very happy for my
sister. She's having a blast," Naree said. "I tried my best. I wasn't nervous.
From six on, I struggled to make some putts."
That means their older
brother, Chan, is out of a job as Naree's caddie. The 17-year-old, one of the
nation's top junior boys' golfers, won't be on Aree's bag for the final two rounds.
"My brother tried to caddy
for her in the Korean Open, and I don't think they got along very well," Naree
said. "He's a great caddie."
Naree was just as popular
with fans, who pushed golf balls and caps at her to sign.
"That's a long name. You're
going to have to shorten it," a woman told Naree as she squeezed her name in
careful script on a golf ball.
Aree double-bogeyed the
par-4, 403-yard 13th when she pushed her tee shot into the thick rough on the
right side of the fairway and ended up behind a tree. She sank a 6-footer to
salvage the double bogey.
"When I'm out there, I
don't think about anything else except just playing my game and sticking to my
game plan," Aree said.
That was evident in the
way she calmly bounced back with a birdie on the par-3, 148-yard 14th - one of
four in her round.
"That's what a champion
does," said Sherri Turner, a 15-year tour veteran. "You forget you're playing
with a 13-year-old. She's very focused, especially for a kid. I look for great
things to happen for her."
Turner, 43, said playing
with Aree helped her own game. She shot a 2-under 70 and was at 147, one behind
Aree.
"I thought, 'Man, I'm going
to be really embarrassed if she makes the cut and I don't.' She had no concept
how difficult this course is," she said. "I put a lot of pressure on myself before
we even started."
Hall of Famer Nancy Lopez
was a 17-year-old amateur when she played in her first LPGA tournament. She also
made the cut and tied for 18th.
Both Wongluekiet sisters
are missing a week of school in Bradenton, Fla., where they attend the private
David Leadbetter Academy to hone their golf games. Their mother, who is from
Thailand, and father, who is from South Korea, are here this week.
The sisters have said they'll
play Monday qualifying to try to get into three more LPGA tournaments, including
the U.S. Open in July. They received sponsor exemptions this week.
"My only concern is that
she might get burned out. They're so programmed to do this," Turner said of Aree.
"What does she do for the next five years? I hope she's allowed to be a kid."
DIVOTS: Webb said
she and countrywoman Rachel Hetherington never discussed turning pro when they
competed together as juniors in Australia. "It's not like over here in the States.
You talk to the Wongluekiets and they tell you when they're going to turn pro,"
Webb said. "In Australia, you mention it to anyone and if it gets back to an
official, they're going to say it's against your amateur status." ... Anyone
wanting to walk in the shoes of singer Celine Dion, the most popular celebrity
in the pro-am, would have to shell out $159. That's how much the handmade Italian
leather yellow shoes she wore cost in the merchandise pavilion. ... The late
Jim Murray, who was a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for the Los Angeles Times,
and Bob Rosburg, an ABC golf reporter for 25 years, were the first recipients
of the Babe Zaharias LPGA Journalism Awards presented Friday.
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