Karrie Webb

Webb, KarrieKarrie Webb, 2015.

Karrie Webb (born December 21, 1974, Ayr, Queensland, Australia) is an Australian professional golfer who emerged in the mid-1990s as one of the sport’s best players.

Webb began playing golf at age eight, and by her early teens she was competing exclusively against top local men players. Turning professional in 1994, she joined the Women’s Professional Golfers’ European Tour. The following year she won the Women’s British Open, her last win before joining the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) tour in 1996.

In just her second LPGA tournament, Webb demonstrated the mental toughness of a veteran, defeating Martha Nause and Jane Geddes on the fourth hole of a sudden-death play-off. Shortly thereafter, Webb began to rewrite the record books. Three more tournament victories in 1996, along with 12 top-five finishes, led her to a single-season earnings record of $1,002,000—the first time that a rookie on either the men’s or the women’s tour had reached the million-dollar mark. Webb capped her incredible debut season by winning the LPGA Rookie of the Year award. In 1997 Webb shot a career-low 63 en route to her second victory at the Women’s British Open. She collected two other wins and led the tour with a scoring average of 70. With two tournament victories and 20 top-20 finishes in 1998, Webb passed the $2 million mark in career earnings. The following season she won six tournament titles (including the du Maurier Classic) and was named Player of the Year.

Regarded as the LPGA’s answer to Tiger Woods, Webb continued to dominate women’s golf in 2000. She began the year with three straight tournament victories—one short of Nancy Lopez’s record of four wins in a row—and went on to win two majors, the Nabisco Championship and the U.S. Women’s Open. By shooting a 6-under-par 282 to take the U.S. Women’s Open title, the 25-year-old Webb earned enough points to qualify for enshrinement in the LPGA Hall of Fame (though she was not eligible for induction until she had played 10 years on the tour). She ended 2000 by winning her second consecutive Player of the Year award. In 2001 she repeated as champion at the U.S. Women’s Open, and later that year she won the LPGA Championship to become the youngest woman ever to win all four of the modern-day majors. After winning the Women’s British Open in 2002, however, Webb struggled. She failed to capture a major title in the next two seasons, and in 2005 she recorded no LPGA victories. In 2006, however, she returned to form, winning five events, including the Nabisco Championship. Webb also competed on the Australian Ladies Professional Golf tour, and in 2008 she won her 10th ALPG event. In 2014 she recorded her 41st victory on the LPGA tour. Webb was inducted into both the World Golf Hall of Fame and the LPGA Hall of Fame in 2005.

Anthony G. Craine The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica