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Webb cruises to eight
shot lead
Karrie Webb found notes
in her locker this week from two ardent fans, explaining how she was their favorite
player and asking if they could ever play together.
Aree Wongluekiet, the 13-year-old
author of one of the notes, will get her wish sooner than she expected thanks
to a bogey-free 4-under 68 today in the Nabisco Championship.
Webb, the 25-year-old who's
dominated the LPGA Tour in recent years, and Wongluekiet, who likely represents
its future, will join Dottie Pepper in Sunday's final group.
Webb pulled away from the
rest of the field with a 5-under 67 for an eight-shot lead over an aching Pepper
in pursuit of the LPGA's first major of the year.
Wongluekiet (pronounced
Wahn-gloo-KEE-it) and her twin sister, Naree, both the second-youngest ever to
play in an LPGA tournament, left the notes for Webb. Naree missed the cut, but
she'll be following along Sunday.
"When I was 13, I still
had a 15-handicap, so I definitely wouldn't have been messing around playing
on the LPGA," Webb said. "I just can't imagine what's going through her mind
right now at 13 years old in the last group of a major."
Wongluekiet, a native of
Thailand who lives in Bradenton, Fla., had the second-lowest round ever by an
amateur at the Nabisco. She's tied for third with '98 Nabisco champion Pat Hurst
(70) and Chris Johnson (73) at 2-under 214.
Can Aree catch Webb?
"I'll try, but probably
not," she said.
The rest of the field knows
the feeling.
"We're playing for second
place," Hurst said.
Webb is a dominant frontrunner.
Since 1996, the Australian has led 16 times going into the final round and won
nine tournaments.
"If the people behind you
aren't doing anything, sometimes it's easy to bog down and just play the same
sort of golf that they're playing," she said, "but I tried to still play aggressively
and shoot as low as I could."
Webb had six birdies and
one bogey in her 67, the same score she had in Thursday's first round. Her 12-under
204 total was one off the 54-hole record of 203 set by Amy Alcott in '88 and
equaled by Pepper last year.
"It's probably the best
I've hit it," said Webb, who has won four of her first five events this year.
"Am I conscious? I don't feel like it out there."
Webb's only glitch was
bogeying the 380-yard 4th. She missed the fairway to the right and chipped to
10 feet, but missed the putt. Otherwise, four of her six birdies came on par-4s.
"I did realize that when
Dottie and Chris started making some bogeys on the back nine that no one else
had really done anything, so it just made it easier to fire at the pin," she
said. "I was just trying to increase my lead as much as I could."
Pepper, the defending champion,
shot a 72 for the second straight day, with three bogeys on the back nine. She
played in pain because of back spasms that occurred as a result of her left foot
slipping out from under her on wet grass at the practice range.
"My back is just fired
up right now," said Pepper, who required treatment afterward. "I had a minimal
amount of feeling from the belt down. On the first tee, I didn't know if I'd
make it to the first green. To shoot even-par is pretty substantial."
Wongluekiet has a new goal
after achieving her first goal of making the cut.
"The best ever finish by
an amateur is fourth, so I'll try and beat that," she said, "but not worry too
much about it, just go out there and try and play my game."
Wongluekiet had four birdies,
including one on the par-5, 508-yard 9th hole.
Asked if she was ever in
danger of making a bogey, Wongluekiet cracked up the media by saying, "Every
single hole. There's always a possibility."
The closest she came was
on the par-4, 403-yard 13th hole. Her drive went right and landed behind some
trees. She punched out of the rough about 75 yards to the fairway, then pitched
to 12 feet past the hole and made the par putt.
"She's a great player,
all around," said Scotland's Janice Moodie, Wongluekiet's playing partner. "She
didn't miss a beat."
Michele Redman, Wendy Doolan
of Australia and Lorie Kane of Canada were tied for fourth at 1-under 215. Moodie
and Cathy Johnston-Forbes shared fifth at par-216.
DIVOTS: The lowest
round ever by an amateur in the Nabisco was a 66 by Caroline Keggi in the third
round of the '88 tournament. Keggi shot 69 on the final day and wound up fourth.
... The last time Webb failed to win after taking a lead into the final 18 holes
was last week in Phoenix. She led by two strokes at the start and shot 70 to
finish second to Charlotta Sorenstam. ... Annika Sorenstam was at 5-over 221
after making Friday's cut by one stroke. ... Judy Rankin, whose record of 25
top-10 finishes in 1977 still stands, was nominated for the LPGA Hall of Fame
by the tour's veteran's committee. She needs 75 percent of the vote by the tour's
tournament division when it meets May 2 in Austin, Texas, to gain admittance.
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