07 May 2011

Another good one gone

Rico says he doesn't care all that much about golf (can't play for shit, for one thing), but Richard Goldstein has an article in The New York Times about a good golfer and a nice guy:
Seve Ballesteros, the charismatic Spanish golfer who won the Masters twice and the British Open three times and helped propel Europe’s rise in the Ryder Cup competition with the United States, died early Saturday at his home in northern Spain, where his struggle with brain cancer had gained wide attention in the sports world. He was 54.
Ballesteros had surgery for a cancerous brain tumor in October of 2008, and had been cared for at his home in the coastal town of Pedreña, where he died early Saturday morning, his family said in a statement on his website.
Ballesteros was only nineteen and virtually unknown when he was thrust into the golf spotlight in July of 1976. He was on the final hole of the British Open at Royal Birkdale, on England’s western coast, when he hit a brilliant chip shot between two bunkers that landed four feet from the cup. He then sank his putt to tie Jack Nicklaus for second place behind Johnny Miller after having led for three rounds.
That daring chip, and the shots before it that rescued him after wild drives into dunes and bushes, caught the golf world’s attention and defined the kind of game that made Ballesteros one of the finest players of his era.
With a passion for perfection, an uncommon intensity and a brilliant short game, Ballesteros won five major championships in a ten-year span. At Augusta National in 1980, he became the first European and, at 23, the youngest player to win the Masters. (Tiger Woods became the youngest in 1997 when he won the Masters at 21.) Ballesteros won the Masters again in 1983, captured the British Open in 1979, 1984, and 1988, and won the World Match Play Championship five times.
“I think he comes as close to a complete player as anybody I’ve ever seen,” his fellow golfer Ben Crenshaw told Sports Illustrated in 1985. “He can hit every shot in the bag and do it with the style and look of a champion.”
Ballesteros won 45 events on the European Tour, and he was its earnings leader six times. He was in the vanguard of world-class Spanish golfers, preceding José Maria Olazábal, Miguel Ángel Jiménez, and Sergio García. But he saw limited action in the United States, winning four PGA Tour events in addition to his Masters triumphs.
Told of Ballesteros’s deteriorating condition, Olazábal and Jiménez were visibly upset after finishing their second rounds at the Spanish Open in Terrassa on Friday and would not speak with reporters.
In Charlotte, North Carolina, at the Wells Fargo Championship, Phil Mickelson said that beyond Ballesteros’s impact on the game, “the greatest thing about Seve is his flair and his charisma.” “Because of the way he played the game of golf, you were drawn to him,” Mickelson added. “You wanted to go watch him play.”
Ballesteros was something of a golf magician. In addition to his miraculous recoveries from wild drives, he could balance three golf balls on top of one another, a favorite trick. Handsome with a swashbuckling style, he was a favorite of the television cameras, as Frank Hannigan, senior executive director of the United States Golf Association, remarked at the 1985 Masters. “He’s made for this medium,” Hannigan said. “They come in close for a shot, and they can’t miss. You can see his thought processes. For me, he is more fun to watch than any player in the world.”
Severiano Ballesteros (pronounced buy-yuh-STAY-ros) was born in Pedreña, where his father, a former Spanish-champion rower, was a farmer. His three older brothers, Baldomero, Manuel, and Vicente, were golf pros, as was his uncle Ramon Sota.
As a boy, he batted stones with a homemade golf club on the beaches near his family’s stone farmhouse. When he was eight, his brother Manuel gave him a three-iron, and he began to caddie at a prestigious golf club in Santander, near his home. He won the caddie championship there at age twelve with a 79, sneaked onto the course at night to practice his shots, quit school at fourteen and turned pro at sixteen.
Ballesteros won his first major when he captured the 1979 British Open at Royal Lytham & St. Annes in England, and it was there, on the sixteenth hole of the final round, that he made one of his most storied shots. With his ball in a parking lot, he hit a sand wedge to the green, then sank a twenty-foot putt for birdie and went on to win by three shots, besting Nicklaus. In this case, however, it wasn’t a matter of Ballesteros’s being out of control on a drive. He had deliberately hit to the parking lot to take advantage of the prevailing winds.
Ballesteros led or was tied for the lead after each round in capturing the 1980 Masters, but he ran into trouble late on the final day, three-putting the tenth hole, hitting twice into Rae’s Creek and sending his drive on the seventeenth hole onto the seventh green. At one point, he was only two shots ahead, but he won by four, a margin he reprised in winning the 1983 Masters.
Apart from his individual achievements, Ballesteros was a leading force in Europe’s emergence on the Ryder Cup scene after players from the continent were allowed to join with British and Irish players beginning in 1979. He played on eight Ryder Cup squads, including the 1987 team that achieved the Europeans’ first triumph in America, at Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio. He won 22 ½ points from his 37 matches over all. He was the nonplaying captain of Europe’s team in 1997, when the Valderrama Golf Club on Spain’s Costa del Sol played host to the event, the first time the Ryder Cup had been held on the continent.
Ballesteros was a master of concentration. “I’m so deeply immersed in my game plan and my play that I’m virtually oblivious to outside sights and sounds,” he wrote in his 1991 book Natural Golf, written with John Andrisani. “I never hear my playing partner’s clubs rattling, and I rarely ever hear the gallery applauding. I’m grinding as hard as I can inside my bubble.”
Ballesteros’s last European Tour victory came at the Spanish Open in 1995; a chronic back problem curtailed his play after that. His biggest disappointment was his failure to win a United States Open championship, his often erratic play proving costly on the customarily narrow fairways and high roughs. Ballesteros was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1999 and retired in an emotional news conference at Carnoustie before the 2007 British Open. In recent years, he ran a golf-course design business.
He learned he had a brain tumor after fainting at Madrid’s international airport while waiting to board a flight to Germany on 6 October 2008. The following March, in an interview with Marca, a Spanish sports newspaper, he spoke openly about his cancer and the 300,000 get-well cards he had received from around the world as he underwent chemotherapy. “I’m not called Seve Ballesteros,” the paper quoted him as saying, “I’m called Seve Mulligan, because I’ve had the luck to be given a mulligan, which in golf is a second chance.”
Ballesteros is survived by two sons and a daughter and his three brothers. His marriage to Carmen Botín ended in divorce in 2004. In 1988, when he won a major for the last time, Ballesteros displayed the elements that had been his trademark: he was erratic but overwhelmingly brilliant. He had two bogeys in one eleventh-hole stretch of the final round of the British Open, but he also had six birdies and an eagle in that span, finishing with a 65 to beat Nick Price by two shots. On the 16th hole, he hit a nine-iron from 135 yards that stopped three inches from the cup. “It was the best round of my life so far,” Ballesteros said. “That shot at sixteen was one of my two best.” The victory came at Royal Lytham & St. Annes, the site of that memorable approach shot in his first British Open nine years earlier. Holding the champion’s silver cup aloft, Ballesteros said, “This time I didn’t hit from the parking lot.”
Rico says it's a little chilling when they start going younger than you...

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