In a career marked by one accomplishment after another, Karrie Webb’s greatest achievement arguably is qualifying for the World Golf Hall of Fame by age 25. “It took me forever to get in,” said Juli Inkster. “I feel like the turtle and Karrie is the hare.”
“It’s hard to fathom,” added Beth Daniel. “When the LPGA changed the qualifying criteria [in 1999], they made it so the players who dominated their era would be recognized and Karrie’s been dominant.”
Webb succeeded without a learning curve. She was young, confident, and fearless. In 1995, at age 20, she won the Weetabix Women’s British Open before she became a member of the LPGA Tour. Her legend grew when she defied a broken wrist to earn her LPGA Tour card. Then in just her second tournament as a LPGA member, she won the HealthSouth Inaugural. “She was a name you heard about before she became a force on Tour,” said two-time U.S. Women’s Open champion Meg Mallon, “and she didn’t disappoint.”