A mi el golf no me motiva, y nunca vi a Seve jugar ni he leido grandes cosas de el aparte de los últimos años que todo el mundo se rendia en elogios. Pero es que como dicen, fué grande en GB. Y que grande...he escojido este articulo foráneo, para ver lo que supuso para el golf y para GB, Seve ballesteros.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1384258/Seve-Ballesteros-tributes-pour-golf-legend-dies-age-54.html * ‘Lost an inspiration, genius, role model, hero and friend,’ says golfer Lee Westwood
Tributes have been pouring in from the world of sport following the news that golfer Seve Ballesteros has died.
World No1 golfer Lee Westwood tweeted: ‘It's a sad day. Lost an inspiration, genius, role model, hero and friend. Seve made European golf what it is today. RIP Seve.’ Manchester United’s Rio Ferdinand, meanwhile, said: ‘RIP Ballesteros. One of golf’s greats.’
Ballesteros had suffered a 'severe deterioration' as he battled a brain tumour, his family said.
The world of sport is mourning the passing of Spanish Golf Legend Seve Ballesteros, who died today aged 54
The five-time major winning Spaniard was recovering from surgeries performed in 2008 to remove a malignant tumor from his brain.
Other sports stars who have been paying tribute include Spanish tennis star Rafa Nadal, who said: 'Seve is one of this country's great sportsmen. I've been lucky enough to meet him and play golf with him.’
In a statement on Ballesteros' website today, the family said the 54-year-old golfer passed away at 2:10 am local time at his home at Pedrena, in northern Spain, where he has mostly been since undergoing four operations in late 2008.
Ballesteros and his wife Carmen in 2004 at Spanish Crown Prince Felipe of Bourbon's wedding
In a statement, the Ballesteros family says it 'is very grateful for all the support and gestures of love that have been received since Seve was diagnosed with a brain tumour on 5th October 2008'.
Ballesteros had earlier been blessed by a priest in a ceremony reserved for Catholics who are dangerously ill or close to death.
The golfing legend received the sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick, according to Spanish national newspaper El Mundo.
Ballesteros with his former wife Carmen and their son Baldomero after winning the Volvo PGA championship at Wentworth in 1991
During the ceremony a priest uses olive oil to bless a patient on the forehead and hands while reciting prayers.
The paper said the sportsman had received Extreme Unction, an older term for the sacrament, but gave no further details.
The Anointing of the Sick is one part of the Last Rites ritual in the Catholic Church.
Ballesteros said it was a 'miracle to be alive' at a press conference in Madrid Volvo World Match Play Championship just eight months later
Ballesteros, 54, who announced his retirement from golf in 2007, collapsed at Madrid Airport in October 2008 and two days later it was confirmed he was suffering from a brain tumour.
He underwent an initial 12-hour operation, but further surgery was necessary before he was well enough to return home and begin chemotherapy and radiotherapy treatment.
'I am very motivated and working hard, although I am aware that my recovery will be slow and therefore I need to be patient and have a lot of determination,' he said at the time.
'For these reasons I am following strictly all the instructions that the doctors are giving me. Besides, the physiotherapists are doing a great job on me and I feel better every day.'
After a second course of chemotherapy at Madrid's Le Paz Hospital in February 2009 he said on his website: 'The results of the check-up were really positive, better even than the first ones.'
Two more courses followed and four months later Ballesteros made his first public appearance, saying it was 'a miracle' to be alive.
Seve Ballesteros's sense of humour will be sorely missed
In December 2009 he appeared on television to receive the BBC's Lifetime Achievement Award at the Sports Personality of the Year event.
He won the Open three times, the Masters twice and played an inspirational role in the Ryder Cup, helping Europe to lift the trophy in 1985, 1987, 1989 and 1995 before captaining them to another victory at Valderrama two years later.
Ballesteros turned professional in 1974 at the age of 16 and made his first huge impact two years later by finishing second in the Open alongside Jack Nicklaus at Royal Birkdale.
His first major title came in the 1979 Open at Royal Lytham, he then became Masters champion in 1980 and 1983 and lifted the Claret Jug again at St Andrews in 1984 - arguably his greatest moment - and back at Lytham in 1988.
After a total of 87 tournament wins, his retirement came following years of battling an arthritic back and knee problems.
He was planning a farewell appearance for British fans at last year's Open at St Andrews - not in the main event, but in the four-hole Champions Challenge - but was not well enough to travel.
Only last month Phil Mickelson decided on a Spanish menu for the Champions Dinner at The Masters in Augusta in honour of Ballesteros.
Vintage: Ballesteros saw off defending champion Tom Watson in memorable fashion, winning the second of his three Open championships, at St Andrews in 1984
Seve was the last of his kind
There will never be another golfer quite like Seve Ballesteros. Perhaps no other sportsman quite like him either.
Put together the charisma of Arnold Palmer and the shot-making skills of Tiger Woods and you come close. Yet at his peak, hard though it might be to believe, his appeal was greater than the sum of those two giants of the game.
In the 1980s Europe became blessed with a ‘Big Five’ of Ballesteros, Nick Faldo, Sandy Lyle, Bernhard Langer and Ian Woosnam.
Seve Ballesteros holds the Ryder Cup trophy in the rain in 1997 after Europe beat the United States
True great: Seve Ballesteros holds the Ryder Cup trophy in the rain in 1997 after Europe beat the United States
But if there was a tournament in Britain and Ballesteros was battling for the title with one or more of the other four he was the one the vast majority of the crowd wanted to come out on top.
Yes, he was that popular in a foreign land. Uniquely so.
It was one of the reasons he chose to announce his retirement in July last year at Carnoustie at The Open.
‘The people from the United Kingdom, they really were fantastic every time,’ he said in an emotional press conference that followed rumours of him trying to commit suicide following the death of a close friend. Rumours he vehemently denied.
‘They were great. There was kind of a good feeling between them and I. There was a good connection. There was a good chemistry. They really support me all the way and this is one thing that I will never forget.
‘I say that many times and I wanted to say it one more time. Most of the tournaments that I won were thanks to them, because they really support me very much and I feel it and I'm very grateful for that. So thank you very much.’
The 1984 Open at St Andrews was probably the high point, Ballesteros' own joy when his winning putt toppled into the hole on its dying roll matched by a roar that rocked the ‘auld grey toun’ to its foundations.
It was his second Open and the fourth of his five majors, but there is no greater setting than the Home of Golf and to triumph there in such dramatic fashion - it denied Tom Watson what could have been a record-equalling sixth Claret Jug - made it the dream scenario.
By then every golf fan knew the beginning of the Seve story. The youngest of four brothers who at the age of seven was given the rusty head of an old three-iron and who searched for sticks that he made into shafts.
Pebbles from the beach near their Pedrena home on Spain's north coast became his balls and such was his love for and devotion to the game that his brother Manuel, who became a European Tour player himself, said: ‘Without a golf club in his hand he was like a man with no legs. You never saw him without a club.’
Seve started caddying at eight and at 14 all the Spanish professionals knew that there was ‘this kid’ who was very special and destined for greatness.
Not that it looked that way when he first ventured onto the European Tour on his 17th birthday, shooting an 89 in the Portuguese Open qualifier and crying when asked about it afterwards.
He made it into the Spanish Open a week later, though, and while his first official Tour round was an 83 and he comfortably missed the cut by seven strokes it was only two events later that he came fifth at the Italian Open.
Ballesteros had top 10 finishes in his first three starts of 1975 and the following summer came the performance that made him a world star.
Still only 19, he jointly led The Open at Royal Birkdale after an opening 69, then led by two after the second and third rounds. American star Johnny Miller's closing 66 gave him the title by six, but Ballesteros' chip-and-run between the bunkers at the last enabled him to tie Jack Nicklaus for second place.
Now everybody knew how good he was - and how good he was going to be. It was no surprise that he won the European Order of Merit the following three seasons, nor that he had only three years to wait for his first major.
That was at Royal Lytham - he was dubbed ‘the car park champion’ for his excursion into a television compound at the 16th hole in the final round - and it was back at the Lancashire links that his fifth and final major came with an unforgettable closing 65 in 1988.
Between those two weeks he twice conquered all at The Masters as well. No European had won at Augusta before, but he gave the other members of the 'Big Five' the belief that they could become green jacket holders too and eventually they all did.
As did Jose Maria Olazabal, the player with whom Ballesteros formed the most successful partnership in the Ryder Cup history - 11 wins, two halves and only two defeats.
It was only in the year he won his first Open, of course, that continental players started appearing in the match, but he was soon to become its most passionate exponent.
Ballesteros simply poured his heart and soul into it and was more responsible than anybody for turning the Ryder Cup into one of sport's most eagerly-awaited occasions.
At times it almost got too heated - Paul Azinger famous called him ‘the king of gamesmanship’ and Ballesteros replied that the 1991 American team were ‘11 nice guys and Paul Azinger’ - but the pair put all that aside when Azinger battled cancer.
Now the thoughts are for Ballesteros' family, most of all naturally his children Baldomero, Miguel and Carmen.
The break-up of his marriage followed on from the sharp decline in his golfing fortunes.
Ballesteros won the last of his record 50 European Tour titles in 1995. At 38 he was not old in golfing terms, but back problems had plagued him for years and, as talented as he was and as magical on and around the greens as he remained, he found it harder and harder to be competitive.
Victorious as Ryder Cup captain when the match was played in Spain for the first time in 1997 - so keen was he that he created land speed records for a golf buggy - it was to be in the competition created in his honour that the last hurrahs came.
Ballesteros twice beat Colin Montgomerie in the Seve Trophy, the second of them at Druids Glen almost defying belief given some of the places he visited.
That week also saw him back in partnership with Olazabal, who went down on his knees in an act of obeisance after the great man holed a bunker shot to give them victory over Padraig Harrington and Paul McGinley.
There are countless such strokes to be remembered. I take caddie Pete Coleman at his word when he recalled the time when Ballesteros, deep in the trees, had to play out sideways, but miraculous conjured up a shot which travelled the required distance to the middle of the fairway, then curved left and made it to the green.
No plaque was put down for that one, but there was for his amazing escape from behind a swimming pool wall in Switzerland in 1993.
The wall was eight feet high and it was less than a yard in front of him. Not only that, there were also trees all around, but Ballesteros spied a tiny gap and, to the astonishment of his caddie Billy Foster, opened the face of a pitching wedge, sent the ball through the gap and then chipped in for birdie.
In his declining years as a player Ballesteros' frustrations boiled over into confrontations with officials that culminated in 2003 when he was fined and reprimanded by the Tour after calling them ‘PGA Mafia’, having refused to accept a slow play penalty.
A flawed genius then, but undoubtedly a genius.
‘Seve can have an off week and still win. But if Seve plays well and the rest of us play well, Seve wins.’ So said Ben Crenshaw.
Ballesteros disputed that. He reckoned that if Europe's 'Big Five' all played at the peak of their powers then Lyle would come out on top - ‘by five, with me second’.
That was just talking talent, though. Ballesteros brought so much more than that to the sport and for him to die at such an early age robs the sport of a true superstar.
At first people struggled to say his name. But Seve - that became enough to identify him - will be remembered by everyone who saw him play.