Advertisement


Seve Ballesteros

Spanish golf great dies at 54

PAUL LOGOTHETIS, The Associated Press

MADRID (AP) — Seve Ballesteros was a genius with a golf club in his hands, an inspiration to everyone who saw him create shots that didn't seem possible. The Spaniard's passion and pride revived European golf and made the Ryder Cup one of the game's most compelling events.

Ballesteros, a five-time major champion whose incomparable imagination and fiery personality made him one of the most significant figures in modern golf, died Saturday from complications of a cancer ous brain tumor. He was 54.

His career was defined not only by what he won, but how he won.

"He was the greatest show on earth," Nick Faldo said.

Tiger Woods said on Twitter: "Seve was one of the most talented and excited golfers to ever play the game. His creativity and inventiveness on the golf course may never be surpassed. His death came much too soon."

A statement on Ballesteros' website early Saturday said he died peacefully at 2:10 a.m. local time, surrounded by his family at his home in Pedrena. It was in this small Spanish town where Ballesteros first wrapped his hands around a crude 3-iron and began inventing shots that he would display on some of golf's grandest stages.

"I held his hands, caressed them and thought: 'what these hands have done in the world'," his brother Baldomero told Spanish agency Efe. "He knew he was dying, and he did it with full presence of mind.

"What is leaving us is more than a brother, a son or a father; what is leaving us is glory."

Ballesteros won the Masters at 23, leading by 10 shots at one point in the final round. He was a three-time winner of the British Open, no moment greater than his 1984 victory at St. Andrews. He was as inspirational in Europe as Arnold Palmer was in America, a handsome figure who feared no shot and often played from where no golfer had ever been.

"Today, golf lost a great champion and a great friend. We also lost a great entertainer and ambassador for our sport," Jack Nicklaus said. "No matter the golf that particular day, you always knew you were going to be entertained. Seve's enthusiasm was just unmatched by anybody I think that ever played the game."

In a long list of spectacular shots, perhaps the most memorable came from a parking lot next to the 16th fairway at Royal Lytham & St. Annes in the 1979 British Open. Leading by two in the final round, he drove his ball into the lot, had a car removed to get his free drop, then fired his second shot to 15 feet and made birdie on his way to his first major.

"He was a man who got into trouble. Only for Seve, there was no such thing as trouble," Gary Player once said.

Headlines such as "The Inventor of Spanish Golf" and "Life of a Legend" were splashed across Spanish media as athletes and other notable figures from around the world paid tribute Saturday.

"This is such a very sad day for all who love golf," European Tour chief executive George O'Grady said on the tour website. "Seve's unique legacy must be the inspiration he has given to so many to watch, support and play golf, and finally to fight a cruel illness with equal flair, passion and fierce determination. We have all been so blessed to live in his era."

Lee Westwood, the No. 1 player in the world, said on Twitter: "Seve made European golf what it is today."

An emotional Jose Maria Olazabal played through tears at the Spanish Open on Saturday, overcome by grief.

Olazabal, who teamed with Ballesteros as the most successful pairing in Ryder Cup history, broke down as players honored Ballesteros with a minute's silence.

"I just played the most difficult round of my life. It was very tough to make it to the first tee and hit the first drive," said Olazabal, who shot a 3-over 75. "I don't think there will ever be another player like him. There can be others that are very good, but none will have his charisma."

Ballesteros' last challenge came from an unbeatable foe: cancer .

He fainted in a Madrid airport while waiting to board a flight to Germany on Oct. 6, 2008, and was subsequently diagnosed with the brain tumor. He underwent four separate operations, including a 6½-hour procedure to remove the tumor and reduce swelling around the brain. After leaving the hospital, his treatment continued with chemotherapy.

Ballesteros looked thin and pale while making several public appearances in 2009 after being given what he referred to as the "mulligan of my life." But he rarely was seen in public after March 2010, when he fell off a golf cart and hit his head on the ground.

His few appearances or public statements were usually connected to his Seve Ballesteros Foundation to fight cancer . He wanted but was unable to take part in a champions exhibition at St. Andrews for the British Open.

Ballesteros won a record 50 times on the European tour, his first victory as a 19-year-old in the Dutch Open, his last when he was 38 at the Spanish Open in 1995. That also was his last year playing in the Ryder Cup, where he had a 20-12-5 (win, lost, drawn) record in eight appearances. Ballesteros was captain in 1997 when Europe won at Valderrama.

"He did for European golf what Tiger Woods did for worldwide golf," three-time major champion Nick Price said from a Champions Tour event in Alabama. "His allegiance to the European Tour was admirable."

Ballesteros was the reason the Ryder Cup was expanded in 1979 to include continental Europe, and it finally beat the United States in 1985 to begin more than two decades of dominance. While others have played in more matches and won more points, no player better represents the spirit and desire of Europe than Ballesteros.

His battle went beyond the golf course.

Ballesteros did not play in the 1981 Ryder Cup over a dispute with Europe over appearance money. He later battled former PGA Tour commissioner Deane Beman

continued...

Seve Ballesteros

April 9, 1957 - May 7, 2011

Remember
Memory Book

“Share a memory of Seve Ballesteros”

Share A Memory


Light A Candle

Forward This Tribute To A Friend