| Inkster
wins with bogey-free round
Most of the final
round of the Welch's-Circle K Championship, Juli Inkster was reeling in the leaders.
Then she eagled the 13th hole, and everybody started chasing her.
She punctuated her 7-under-par
65 today by sinking the last of her five birdies on No. 16, enough to beat 1995
champion Dottie Pepper by one stroke with a final score of 15-under 273.
"If you were going to ask
me on the first tee today if I would take a 67 or 68, I probably would have taken
it," said Inkster, who started four shots off the pace of third-round leader Dale
Eggeling. "But once I got going and saw that I had a chance to win, it was great."
The title, Inkster's
first this year, left her six points from the 27 needed to qualify for the LPGA
Hall of Fame. It was worth $93,750, boosting her from 19th to third on the money
list -- behind Karrie Webb and Kelly Robbins -- with $148,532 in five tournaments.
Pepper led from
her birdie on the first hole until Inkster's 8-foot eagle putt -- her third shot
on the 470-yard No. 13.
Pepper, who has finished second six times since her last victory 2-1/2 years ago,
was two shots back until she birdied No. 16. But she couldn't make up the ground
when both parred out.
Pepper wasn't discouraged, considering she had surgery on her left hand and a
foot in December. Unable to practice until eight weeks ago, she was 66th in her
first tournament, but tied for second and ninth in the next two before taking
four weeks off. "I
thought I played really well," Pepper said after shooting 69. "I had 10- and 12-
and 14-footers all day long for birdie. They were really good putts that just
didn't go in. I can't go to Phoenix (this week) and work on anything."
Both Inkster and Pepper
hit their second shots over the green on the par-5 No. 18, and two-putted for
par after chipping back.
After the chip, Inkster faced an 18-foot putt for birdie, and she left it about
2 feet short. Pepper's
birdie attempt on the last hole was from about 11 feet. It missed by an inch.
"I thought I hit
it perfectly, and that it was just going to tumble right in the hole," Pepper
said. "If there's
one person I'd want to have make a putt for me, it's Dottie," Inkster said. "I
snuck away with that one, because there's not very many that she's going to miss."
Catriona Matthew
was third at 275, one shot ahead of Ashli Price-Bunch, Nancy Scranton, Hollis
Stacy and Tammie Green.
Webb and defending champion Helen Alfredsson were four shots behind Inkster. For
Webb, a two-time winner this year, it was her lowest finish. She was no lower
than seventh in four previous events.
Third-round leader Dale Eggeling and playing partner Michele Redman tied for 10th
place at 278. Inkster
was the only one of the top 11 to complete the round without a bogey, a key to
victory. "I didn't
get in any real trouble, and I didn't waste any shots," she said.
Pepper started the round with a birdie, but made just her third bogey of the tournament
on the second hole.
Eggeling, who started a shot ahead of Pepper and Redman, bogeyed the first two
holes and three of the first five.
She had two more bogeys after the turn and finished with a 74, perpetuating her
reputation for playing well in Tucson until the final round. Eggeling has missed
just one cut on the Randolph Park North layout in this decade, and this was her
sixth top-10 finish in nine years. |