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An Appreciation by The European Tour Severiano Ballesteros Sota ...

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<strong>An</strong> <strong>Appreciation</strong> <strong>by</strong> <strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong><br />

<strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011


SEVERIANO BALLESTEROS SOTA<br />

<strong>An</strong> appreciation <strong>by</strong> Mitchell Platts<br />

Seve, the farmer’s son who enraptured the world of golf from the moment he refused to<br />

surrender at Royal Birkdale in 1976, lost the one fight that not even his prodigious courage<br />

would allow him to beat.<br />

<strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>, of Spain,<br />

died following a valiant battle with the<br />

cancer diagnosed as a malignant brain<br />

tumour after he lost consciousness in<br />

Madrid Airport on October 5, 2008. He<br />

underwent four operations at the La<br />

Paz Hospital in Madrid to remove the<br />

tumour and reduce the swelling in his<br />

skull as well as chemotherapy.<br />

A superlative career offered a CV<br />

no other <strong>European</strong> golfer can match<br />

with five Major Championships,<br />

50 <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> wins, 38 other<br />

titles worldwide and, of course, a<br />

remarkable Ryder Cup record crowned<br />

<strong>by</strong> his winning performance as Captain<br />

in 1997 at Club de Golf Valderrama in<br />

Spain. That career was cut short <strong>by</strong> an<br />

arthritic back, but his death at 54 years<br />

old sadly brought a premature end to<br />

a life which embroidered the game and<br />

enriched us all.<br />

<strong>Ballesteros</strong> blended skill, spirit and<br />

sheer will power as, playing with his<br />

heart, he fiercely contested every<br />

tournament in which he teed-up.<br />

Millions and millions globally were<br />

drawn to him <strong>by</strong> his passion and<br />

genius. His legacy can be measured<br />

not only <strong>by</strong> the titles he captured, but<br />

the way in which he won them. He<br />

threw caution and technique to the<br />

wind. You didn’t have to like golf to<br />

love Seve.<br />

<strong>Ballesteros</strong>, who on March 22, 1974, at<br />

the age of 16 years 11 months and 12<br />

days became the youngest accredited<br />

professional tournament player in<br />

the history of Spanish golf, made his<br />

<strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> full debut that year in,<br />

appropriately, the Open de España -<br />

coincidentally the tournament which<br />

brought the last of his <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong><br />

wins in 1995 - and then in 1976 he<br />

moved centre-stage at <strong>The</strong> 105th Open<br />

Championship at Royal Birkdale.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re, at the age of 19, he led for<br />

three days. <strong>The</strong> week before he had<br />

been bailing hay at home in Pedreña,<br />

Northern Spain, where at the age of<br />

seven he struck his first shots on the<br />

beach with a cut-down three iron using<br />

stones as ammunition. Now he was<br />

living in a little house in Southport,<br />

on the cusp of a glittering career. His<br />

caddie was a local lad, a policeman<br />

called Dick, and the weather was more<br />

Spanish than English. <strong>The</strong> country was<br />

in the grip of a heat wave.<br />

<strong>The</strong> seaside crowd and those watching<br />

on TV were mesmerised <strong>by</strong> the young<br />

Spanish lad belting the ball as hard<br />

as he could. <strong>Ballesteros</strong> executed the<br />

pragmatism of youth – the shortest<br />

distance between two points being a<br />

straight line to the flag!<br />

By the final day a nation was willing<br />

<strong>Ballesteros</strong> to hold off the might of<br />

America. He led <strong>by</strong> three with 17<br />

holes to play but <strong>by</strong> the turn Johnny<br />

Miller had surged ahead. <strong>The</strong> title<br />

belonged to the Californian; but<br />

<strong>Ballesteros</strong> refused to submit. He<br />

produced a blistering birdie-birdieeagle-birdie<br />

finish – five under in four<br />

holes – and secured a tie for second<br />

with Jack Nicklaus with a deft, cheeky<br />

pitch and run between bunkers at the<br />

18th with which everyone present<br />

knew they had seen the embryonic<br />

flourish of a true superstar.<br />

In many respects it was hardly a<br />

surprise that <strong>Ballesteros</strong> should<br />

erupt on the scene in Southport. <strong>The</strong><br />

course sits amongst the dunes on the<br />

Lancashire coast adjacent to the Irish<br />

Sea. Pedreña, where <strong>Ballesteros</strong> was<br />

born on April 9, 1957 in a two-storey<br />

stone farmhouse that overlooked<br />

the Real Club de Golf de Pedreña,<br />

is a fishing village near Santander<br />

influenced <strong>by</strong> the Bay of Biscay.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re <strong>Ballesteros</strong> grew-up, honed<br />

his game on the beach and later at<br />

the club built in 1929 at the request<br />

of King Alfonso XIII, and began to<br />

believe like all great players in a<br />

sense of destiny. It was inevitable<br />

that he would become a champion.<br />

What increased his confidence was<br />

the loving encouragement he received<br />

from his father, Baldomero, himself<br />

a local hero as a five times winning<br />

oarsman in the Pedreña boat in the<br />

celebrated annual Regata de Traineras,<br />

Baldomero <strong>Ballesteros</strong>, Seve’s elder brother, spoke of his final moments<br />

at home in Pedreña.<br />

“ I held his hands, caressed them and thought ‘what these hands have<br />

done in the world.’ He knew he was dying and he did it with full<br />

presence of mind. He said good<strong>by</strong>e to everyone one <strong>by</strong> one. He grabbed<br />

our hands and whispered into our ears. From very close I told him ‘I<br />

love you.’ <strong>An</strong>d he replied ‘I love you too.’ What is leaving us is more than<br />

a brother, a son or a father; what is leaving us is glory.”<br />

<strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> Chief Executive George O’Grady CBE said:<br />

“ This is such a very sad day for all who love golf. Seve’s unique legacy must<br />

be the inspiration he has given to so many to watch, support, and play<br />

golf, and finally to fight a cruel illness with equal flair, passion, and fierce<br />

determination. We have all been so blessed to live in his era. He was the<br />

inspiration behind <strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong>.”<br />

and his mother, Carmen. <strong>The</strong>y were a<br />

close family, especially on a Sunday,<br />

when <strong>Ballesteros</strong> would help his father<br />

in the cow shed while his mother<br />

prepared lunch.<br />

I recall a breakfast with Seve at the<br />

Ritz in London when, with tears in his<br />

eyes, he spoke warmly of his parents<br />

– his father had now died - and three<br />

brothers. He said: “<strong>The</strong> biggest<br />

influence on my life was my parents<br />

and probably the surroundings<br />

because our house was right there on<br />

the golf course (Real Club de Golf de<br />

Pedreña). My uncle, Ramon <strong>Sota</strong>, was<br />

also a professional golfer and he was<br />

very good.<br />

“My father was always optimistic; he<br />

always believed in me. <strong>The</strong> house had<br />

belonged to my mother’s uncle. When<br />

we were growing up Baldomero, my<br />

eldest brother, had one bedroom,<br />

Manuel had another and I shared with<br />

Vicente. We were a happy family. We<br />

kept cows which my father looked<br />

after. He also fished, some for us to<br />

eat and some to sell, and he caddied.<br />

It seemed that he and my mother were<br />

always working.”<br />

Later the tears turned to smiles when<br />

he recalled being drunk at the age of<br />

12. He said: “I came home and my<br />

father and mother had gone fishing.<br />

My lunch had been left and there was<br />

a bottle of wine. I had four glasses. It<br />

did not go unnoticed when I returned<br />

to school; I was sent back home!”<br />

<strong>Ballesteros</strong> swiftly gave up alcohol<br />

and school. His enjoyment at school<br />

was limited to playing with his<br />

friends and running. He won the<br />

regional championship for 1500m<br />

<strong>by</strong> 25 or 30m. He always craved to<br />

be a champion. His dreams never<br />

concerned money; quite simply he<br />

wanted to be the best.<br />

Nevertheless it was challenging to<br />

learn the game. He said: “It was tough<br />

for me to begin with because I wasn’t<br />

allowed on the golf course. <strong>An</strong>d like<br />

any child, when someone stops you<br />

from doing something, then you want<br />

it more badly. I would sneak on the<br />

course in the evening, practise on the<br />

second hole. I would also play that<br />

second hole from our house <strong>by</strong><br />

hitting the ball from out of the<br />

backyard over on to the green. <strong>The</strong>n<br />

I would run down the hill, grab the<br />

balls and run uphill again. This I did<br />

thousands of times.”<br />

Seve’s upbringing unquestionably<br />

instilled the desire to succeed. Blessed<br />

with wonderful imagination, his ability<br />

to envisage and execute a shot took<br />

your breath away. You almost hoped<br />

that <strong>Ballesteros</strong> would stray from the<br />

straight and narrow because then you<br />

would be witness to a shot of such<br />

scintillating brilliance that even his<br />

playing partners would shake their<br />

heads in amazed acknowledgement.<br />

That brilliance secured for him his first<br />

Open Championship at Royal Lytham<br />

& St <strong>An</strong>nes in 1979. He was the only<br />

player to finish under par for the week<br />

and claimed the famous Claret Jug<br />

<strong>by</strong> three shots from Ben Crenshaw<br />

and Jack Nicklaus. He would win <strong>The</strong><br />

Open Championship again in 1984 at<br />

St <strong>An</strong>drews and back at Royal Lytham<br />

& St <strong>An</strong>nes in 1988 and, of course,<br />

became in 1980 the first <strong>European</strong> to<br />

win the Masters <strong>Tour</strong>nament and won<br />

again at Augusta National in 1983.<br />

In 1979 <strong>Ballesteros</strong> and his compatriot<br />

<strong>An</strong>tonio Garrido created more history<br />

when they stepped onto the first tee<br />

at <strong>The</strong> Greenbrier in White Sulphur<br />

Springs, West Virginia, and became<br />

the first continental players in a<br />

now <strong>European</strong> Ryder Cup Team. This<br />

launched a revolution that would<br />

transform the biennial match with the<br />

United States and trigger a golfing<br />

explosion across the continent of<br />

Europe. In essence the <strong>Ballesteros</strong><br />

factor meant that <strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong>,<br />

<strong>European</strong> golf, world golf would never<br />

be the same.<br />

<strong>Ballesteros</strong> always wore his heart<br />

on his sleeve but such was his<br />

unique ability to blend consummate<br />

skill with unquenchable spirit and<br />

sheer will power that <strong>The</strong> Ryder<br />

Cup provided the perfect stage for<br />

his swashbuckling style. Even in<br />

the team’s slender defeat in 1983<br />

at PGA National Golf Club in Palm<br />

Beach Gardens, Florida, he produced<br />

another of those “shots heard round<br />

the world.” It came at the 18th against<br />

Fuzzy Zoeller – a wood that exited the<br />

fairway bunker where the lip was at<br />

its lowest, flew high with a slice and<br />

landed as softly as you like 18 feet<br />

from the hole.<br />

Zoeller still talks about that shot 28<br />

years later. He said: “It is still the<br />

greatest shot I have ever seen – not<br />

just in <strong>The</strong> Ryder Cup but anywhere. I<br />

still don’t believe it was possible but<br />

Seve saw what no-one else would<br />

have seen.”<br />

In all <strong>Ballesteros</strong>, having guided<br />

Spain to World Cup victories in 1976<br />

and 1977 and later the Continent of<br />

Europe to success in the inaugural<br />

Seve Trophy, made eight Ryder Cup<br />

appearances as a player – winning<br />

20 points from 37 matches – and he<br />

formed with José Maria Olazábal the<br />

greatest Ryder Cup partnership of all<br />

time with 11 wins and two halves from<br />

15 matches. <strong>The</strong>n came that special<br />

moment in 1997 when Seve, a real<br />

Captain Marvel of a leader, led Europe<br />

to victory at Valderrama and was<br />

presented with the Cup <strong>by</strong> the Infanta<br />

Maria, daughter of King Juan Carlos.<br />

What followed, of course, was the<br />

realisation for <strong>Ballesteros</strong> that his<br />

arthritic condition would not allow<br />

him to resurrect a career that had<br />

brought him and his millions of<br />

admirers so much pleasure and<br />

enabled him to become the Number<br />

One golfer in the world.<br />

Yet even though he had come to<br />

terms with this <strong>by</strong> announcing his<br />

competitive retirement he was then<br />

forced to use every ounce of the guts<br />

and determination that brought him<br />

fame on the fairways to battle the<br />

wretched disease that would blight the<br />

last two years or more of his life.<br />

Now we mourn the loss of <strong>Severiano</strong><br />

<strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong> who captured all<br />

our hearts and whose legacy is not<br />

simply to be found in the record books<br />

but also in the knowledge that he<br />

leaves the game far, far better than he<br />

found it.<br />

<strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011 <strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011


TRIBUTES FROM AROUND THE WORLD<br />

HRH <strong>The</strong> Duke of York:<br />

“ I was so sorry to have heard the very sad news of<br />

the death of Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong>. Seve was one of the<br />

inspirations for me to take up the game of golf.<br />

His talent and exuberance in the game is his lasting<br />

legacy. I was privileged to be in Valderrama for<br />

<strong>The</strong> Ryder Cup in 1997 and he was an inspirational<br />

leader and Captain. He will be sadly missed in the<br />

golfing world but his legendary status as the preeminent<br />

<strong>European</strong> golfer of our generation will never be<br />

far from our minds as we toil around trying to emulate<br />

the great man.”<br />

Allen Wronowski, President of the PGA of America:<br />

“ In every generation, there appears one performer in<br />

sport who stands out above another for more than just<br />

ability alone. Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong>, the gallant warrior from<br />

Pedreña, Spain, was the ultimate competitor. We were<br />

fortunate to have had him choose golf. Seve played with<br />

a rare combination of talent and heart, and his intensity<br />

endeared him to his teammates in <strong>The</strong> Ryder Cup, a<br />

competition that elevated his talent and leadership. As<br />

long as the pipes may play to call teams together for <strong>The</strong><br />

Ryder Cup, they will play for Seve.”<br />

Gonzaga Escauriaza, President of the Royal Spanish<br />

Golf Federation:<br />

“ <strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> has always been a model of<br />

talent, determination and perseverance. His loss fills us<br />

with sadness and leaves a great void. It is our sacred<br />

duty to acknowledge his feats and to pass on to future<br />

generations his outstanding legacy.”<br />

Tim Finchem, Commissioner of the PGA <strong>Tour</strong>:<br />

“ All of us at the PGA <strong>Tour</strong> were very saddened to learn of<br />

the passing of Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong>. Our hearts and deepest<br />

sympathies go out to the <strong>Ballesteros</strong> family and his many<br />

fans during this very sad time. For more than 30 years, Seve<br />

had a large impact on the game and inspired many players<br />

with his creativity and flair on and off the golf course. ”<br />

Jacques Rogge, President of the International<br />

Olympic Committee:<br />

“ Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> was a man of incredible skill, charisma<br />

and courage as a sportsman, and the dignified way that<br />

he fought against the disease was characteristic of the<br />

man and was an inspiration to us all. He was a ‘once in a<br />

generation athlete’ in his sport, and his influence on the<br />

game will live long after him.”<br />

Peter Dawson, Chief Executive of the R&A:<br />

“ Everyone at the R&A was saddened to hear of Seve’s death. Our<br />

thoughts go out to his family. Seve was one of the brightest lights of<br />

our game and was an inspiration to millions. His iconic celebration<br />

here at St <strong>An</strong>drews, on the 18th green in 1984, ranks as one of sport’s<br />

greatest moments. <strong>The</strong> game has lost one of the greats.”<br />

José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, Spanish Prime Minister:<br />

“ I would like to express my deepest condolences on the death of<br />

<strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong>, one of the finest golfers of all time and a<br />

legend in world sport. <strong>Severiano</strong> represented a beginning and an<br />

end in the history of Spanish sport: his example paved the way for<br />

the extraordinary success our sport is currently enjoying. He was the<br />

mirror which Spanish athletes who have reached the pinnacle of world<br />

sport looked into. <strong>Severiano</strong> was loved and respected for his great<br />

charisma and strength, which he showed until the very end of his life.”<br />

Jack Peter, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating<br />

Officer, World Golf Hall of Fame and Museum:<br />

“ His time came much too soon, and our thoughts and<br />

prayers go out to the <strong>Ballesteros</strong> family. Seve was<br />

inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1999 and<br />

to honour one of our great members, the Spanish flag<br />

at the Hall of Fame has been lowered to half-mast and<br />

a special tribute has been created in the Museum.<br />

We saluted Seve in this week’s Induction Ceremony<br />

and we will never forget the incredible impact he had<br />

on the game.”<br />

Kyi Hla Han, Executive Chairman of the Asian <strong>Tour</strong>:<br />

“ On behalf of the Asian <strong>Tour</strong>, we were very sad to hear<br />

of Seve’s passing. He was a great champion and he<br />

made world golf what it is today. We send our deepest<br />

condolences to his family.”<br />

Billy Foster, Seve’s former caddie:<br />

“ Seve was an absolute gentleman and the ultimate<br />

warrior. <strong>The</strong>re’s not many players I’ve worked for in my<br />

time that have that aura about them. It was a special<br />

time - I was probably 25 years old, I’d caddied for maybe<br />

ten years, and I got the ultimate dream chance of<br />

working for an absolute superstar.”<br />

Peter Alliss, the voice of BBC Golf:<br />

“ He was wonderful to watch. He brought delight and joy to<br />

many people who watched and played golf. He tweaked<br />

a few tails along the way and bloodied a few noses but<br />

that’s what helped make him what he was. He was a<br />

fighter, feisty, skilful, cheeky, lovable, he was everything.”<br />

Guy Kinnings, Director of IMG Golf:<br />

“ ‘Legend’ is an over-used word but Seve truly was a<br />

legend of the game. He shaped <strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> into<br />

the thriving enterprise it is today and changed <strong>The</strong> Ryder<br />

Cup forever. He inspired those he met and many that<br />

he did not even meet, such was the sheer force of his<br />

personality and will be missed and remembered <strong>by</strong> all.<br />

He was the most charismatic sportsman in history and<br />

he leaves a lasting legacy.”<br />

<strong>An</strong>drew Chandler, Managing Director of International<br />

Sports Management:<br />

“ It was a privilege for me to have played on <strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong><br />

<strong>Tour</strong> when Seve was the best in the world so I saw him<br />

at his absolute best and his best was better than anybody<br />

else’s. He was simply incomparable. Seve was golf’s<br />

Pied Piper. Glamorous women, young kids, blokes and<br />

everybody else followed him and without doubt, he was<br />

the most charismatic person I have ever met anywhere in<br />

the world. <strong>The</strong>re was an unbelievable aura around him<br />

and his smile could light up the darkest room. <strong>The</strong>re will<br />

never be another <strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong>.”<br />

Johan Cruyff, former Dutch international footballer:<br />

“ Seve was a figure of huge significance for golf and for<br />

world sport, his demise is a terrible loss. He was a great<br />

model for young people. Through his achievements and<br />

his personality, he put golf on the map, and thanks to him,<br />

many people enjoy this wonderful sport nowadays. He<br />

was more than a sportsman.”<br />

Rafael Nadal, Tennis World Number One:<br />

“ He was one of the best athletes that Spain has ever had.<br />

He was a pioneer. He was one of the first big athletes that<br />

we have had in this country. When you wake up with news<br />

that he has gone, you face your day differently. <strong>The</strong> only<br />

thing I can do is to give all my support to his family. It is a<br />

loss that they will never get back due to all the values that<br />

Seve had; he was a great inspiration for all of us and all<br />

the athletes. But luckily we have all of his videos so we can<br />

remember him. I once got the chance to play 18 holes with<br />

him and it’s an unforgettable memory.”<br />

Francisco Pernía, President of Seve’s local football team,<br />

Racing Santander:<br />

“ We wore black armbands for our match last weekend<br />

in tribute to a great sportsman, and a unique man, who<br />

fought against his illness to the last.”<br />

Fernando Alonso, Formula One Racing Driver:<br />

“ He was a pioneer of golf in Spain. He was a man who<br />

discovered the sport for his country, and someone who<br />

will always remain as one of the greatest in Spanish<br />

sporting history.”<br />

Pep Guardiola, FC Barcelona manager:<br />

“ Quite simply, Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> was admired and loved <strong>by</strong><br />

all the world. Spanish sport has lost one of its greats.”<br />

Ed Moses, Laureus World Sports Academy Chairman:<br />

“ Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> was simply one of the most passionate<br />

and flamboyant sportsmen I have ever had the pleasure<br />

to know. It is cruel to think that we have lost him as a<br />

Laureus family member at such an early age. You can tell<br />

true greatness when someone is recognised everywhere<br />

he goes. <strong>An</strong>d that was true of Seve. When you were with<br />

him, people always wanted to come over and shake his<br />

hand. He was a sportsman who seemed to transcend the<br />

generations. <strong>The</strong> twinkle in his eyes had not diminished<br />

over the years and you knew you were in the company<br />

of someone exceptional. He will be sadly missed,<br />

but not forgotten.”<br />

Miguel Indurain, five time winner of the <strong>Tour</strong> de France:<br />

“ It is a big loss for the world of sport. Seve always lived his<br />

profession with passion and I have had the opportunity<br />

to share a lot of time with him. He was a great sportsman<br />

and a great person and we will miss him very much.”<br />

<strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011 <strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011


SEVE: HIS REcORDS AND AcHIEVEMENTS<br />

EUROPEAN TOUR INTERNATIONAL ScHEDULE VIcTORIES:<br />

TOTAL 50<br />

1976 Dutch Open<br />

1977 French Open, Uniroyal International (play-off), Swiss Open<br />

1978 Martini International, German Open, Scandinavian Enterprise<br />

Open, Swiss Open<br />

1979 English Golf Classic, 108th Open championship<br />

1980 Madrid Open, Masters <strong>Tour</strong>nament, Martini International,<br />

Dutch Open<br />

1981 Scandinavian Enterprise Open, Benson and Hedges Spanish Open<br />

1982 Cepsa Madrid Open, Paco Rabanne French Open<br />

1983 Masters <strong>Tour</strong>nament, Sun Alliance PGA Championship,<br />

Carrolls Irish Open, Trophée-Lancôme<br />

1984 113th Open championship<br />

1985 Carrolls Irish Open (play-off), Peugeot French Open, Sanyo Open,<br />

Benson and Hedges Spanish Open<br />

1986 Dunhill British Masters, Carrolls Irish Open, Johnnie Walker Monte<br />

Carlo Open, Peugeot French Open, KLM Dutch Open, Trophée<br />

Lancôme (tied) (play-off)<br />

1987 Suze Open (play-off)<br />

1988 117th Open championship, Mallorca Open de Baleares,<br />

Scandinavian Enterprise Open, German Open, Trophée Lancôme<br />

1989 Cepsa Madrid Open, Epson Grand Prix, Ebel <strong>European</strong> Masters —<br />

Swiss Open<br />

1990 Open Renault de Baleares (play-off)<br />

1991 Volvo PGA Championship (play-off), Dunhill British Masters<br />

1992 Dubai Desert Classic (play-off), Turespaña Open de Baleares<br />

(play-off)<br />

1994 Benson and Hedges International Open, Mercedes German<br />

Masters (play-off)<br />

1995 Peugeot Open de España<br />

EUROPEAN TOUR APPROVED SPEcIAL EVENT VIcTORIES:<br />

TOTAL 7<br />

1976 Trophée Lancôme<br />

1981 Suntory World Match Play Championship<br />

1982 Suntory World Match Play Championship<br />

1984 Suntory World Match Play Championship<br />

1985 Suntory World Match Play Championship<br />

1991 Toyota World Match Play Championship<br />

1995 <strong>Tour</strong>noi Perrier de Paris (with José Maria Olazábal)<br />

SEVE: IN NUMBERS<br />

16 – <strong>The</strong> age when he turned professional in<br />

March 1974.<br />

17 – Played his first <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> event; the<br />

1974 Spanish Open, aged 17 years and eight days<br />

to become the youngest professional to play in<br />

a <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> event. This record still stands<br />

today.<br />

19 – Aged 19 years and 121 days when he won his<br />

first <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> title, at the 1976 Dutch Open,<br />

beating Howard clark <strong>by</strong> eight shots.<br />

19 – Aged 19 years and 250 days became the<br />

youngest player to become <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> Number<br />

One in 1976.<br />

61 – <strong>The</strong> total number of weeks he spent at World<br />

Number One from April 1986 to August 1989.<br />

50 – <strong>The</strong> number of <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> International<br />

Schedule victories he won.<br />

418 – <strong>The</strong> number of <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> events he<br />

played in between 1974 and 2007.<br />

5 – Number of Major Championships he won;<br />

three Open Championship titles and two Masters<br />

<strong>Tour</strong>nament titles.<br />

INTERNATIONAL TOURNAMENT VIcTORIES: TOTAL 12<br />

1977 Japan Open, Dunlop Phoenix (JPN), Otago Classic (NZL)<br />

1978 Greater Greensboro Open (USA), Japan Open<br />

1981 Australian PGA Championship, Dunlop Phoenix (JPN)<br />

1983 Westchester Classic (USA)<br />

1985 USF&G Classic (USA)<br />

1988 Westchester Classic (USA), VISA Taiheiyo Masters (JPN)<br />

1991 Chunichi Crowns Open (JPN)<br />

OTHER TOURNAMENT VIcTORIES: TOTAL 19<br />

1974 Campeonato Nacional Para Sub-25 (ESP), Open de Vizcaya (ESP)<br />

1975 Campeonato Nacional Para Sub-25 (ESP)<br />

1976 Memorial Donald Swaelens (BEL), Campeonato de Cataluna (ESP),<br />

Campeonato de Tenerife (ESP)<br />

1977 Braun International Golf (GER)<br />

1978 Kenya Open, Campeonato de España Sub-25<br />

1979 Open el Prat (ESP)<br />

1982 Masters de San Remo (ITA)<br />

1983 Million Dollar Challenge (RSA)<br />

1984 Million Dollar Challenge (RSA)<br />

1985 Campeonato de España-Codorniu<br />

1987 APG Larios (ESP), Campeonato de España Para Profesionales<br />

1988 APG Larios (ESP), Campeonato de España Para Profesionales<br />

1992 Copa Quinto Lentenario per Equipos (ARG)<br />

TEAMS (PRO)<br />

Ryder cup 1979, 83, 85 (winners), 87 (winners), 89, 91, 93, 95<br />

(winners), 97 (Captain) (winners)<br />

Alfred Dunhill cup 1985, 86, 88<br />

World cup 1975, 76 (winners), 77 (winners), 91<br />

Hennessy cognac cup 1976, 78, 80<br />

Double Diamond 1975, 76, 77<br />

<strong>The</strong> Seve Trophy<br />

(captain)<br />

2000 (winners), 02, 03, 07<br />

<strong>The</strong> Royal Trophy<br />

(captain)<br />

2006 (winners), 07 (winners)<br />

SPEcIAL AWARDS<br />

312 – <strong>The</strong> number of events he was in the money in<br />

his <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> career.<br />

88 – <strong>The</strong> number of professional titles he won<br />

between 1974 and 1995.<br />

1986 – <strong>The</strong> last player on <strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> to win<br />

three consecutive events. <strong>The</strong>y were at the Irish<br />

Open, Monte carlo Open and French Open.<br />

1-2-3 – First player on <strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> to pass £1,<br />

£2 and £3 million in <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> Official Career<br />

Earnings.<br />

17 – Won at least one <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> event for 17<br />

years between 1976 and 1992. This is a <strong>European</strong><br />

<strong>Tour</strong> record.<br />

6 – Became the first player in <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> history<br />

to record six official wins in the same season in<br />

1986. <strong>The</strong> events were: British Masters, Irish Open,<br />

Monte Carlo Open, Open de France, Dutch Open<br />

and Trophée Lancôme.<br />

20 – <strong>The</strong> number of points he won in <strong>The</strong> Ryder cup<br />

from his 37 matches played.<br />

1999 – <strong>The</strong> year he was inducted into the World Golf<br />

Hall of Fame.<br />

Harry Vardon Trophy 1976, 77, 78, 86, 88, 91<br />

Ryle Memorial Medal 1979, 84, 88<br />

AGW Trophy 1979, 84, 91<br />

<strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> Golfer of the Year 1986, 88, 91<br />

World Golf Hall of Fame 1999<br />

Honorary Member of <strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> 1983<br />

PGA Recognition Award 2006<br />

BBc Lifetime Achievement Award 2009<br />

16 – <strong>The</strong> number of times he finished in the top ten<br />

of the Order of Merit during his career. A record he<br />

holds jointly with Bernhard Langer.<br />

22 – <strong>The</strong> age he became the youngest player in the<br />

20th Century to win <strong>The</strong> Open Championship in 1979.<br />

12 – <strong>The</strong> number of Ryder cup points won in<br />

partnership with José Maria Olazábal, making the<br />

pair the most successful in Ryder cup history.<br />

1979 – <strong>The</strong> year he first played in <strong>The</strong> Ryder Cup,<br />

along with fellow Spaniard, <strong>An</strong>tonio Garrido.<br />

2 – Number of times he won the World cup for<br />

Spain: in 1976 and 1977 with Manuel Piñero and<br />

<strong>An</strong>tonio Garrido respectively.<br />

8 – <strong>The</strong> number of Ryder Cup matches he played in<br />

between 1979 and 1995.<br />

6 – Number of times he was <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> Number<br />

One. <strong>The</strong> years were: 1976, 77, 78, 86, 88, 91.<br />

1980 – First <strong>European</strong> to win the Masters<br />

<strong>Tour</strong>nament.<br />

23 – Aged 23 and four days became the then youngest<br />

player to win the Masters <strong>Tour</strong>nament in 1980.<br />

<strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011 <strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011


<strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011 <strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011


TRIBUTES FROM THE GOLF WRITERS<br />

Núria Pastor (La Vanguardia)<br />

“ Seve discovered golf for the Spanish people and made all of us<br />

feel very proud of his victories. I had the privilege to cover his<br />

career since the very beginning. <strong>The</strong>re was nothing like following<br />

Seve on a golf course. His fierceness, his desire, his way to play<br />

and his determination were unique. His image will be in our<br />

minds forever.”<br />

Bill Elliott (Golf Monthly)<br />

“ Seve brought a passion to golf that it never had before and has<br />

not enjoyed since. He made this stuffy old game seem sexy and<br />

exciting. He was the godfather of the modern <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong>,<br />

moving the interest from golf lovers to general sports fans and<br />

non-sports fans alike.”<br />

Derek Lawrenson (<strong>The</strong> Daily Mail)<br />

“ Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> at the highest of his powers might just have<br />

represented the zenith in the 500-year history of the Royal and<br />

<strong>An</strong>cient game.”<br />

Karl MacGinty (<strong>The</strong> Irish Independent)<br />

“ On the course, his shot-making could be surreal and as wildly<br />

inventive as Salvador Dali…though Seve also succeeded in<br />

melting the stuffy social mores of golf with his personality.”<br />

Raul <strong>An</strong>dreu (Mundo Deportivo and Solo Golf Y Viajes)<br />

“ Passion, charisma, tenacity, spirit of fight, humanity, sense of<br />

humour...the list is very long. Seve was an unbelievable person and<br />

this is, for me, the saddest moment of my career. However, I’ve been<br />

a very privileged man to know him, to have meals and dinners with<br />

him, night chats with him and a drink, to watch soccer matches with<br />

him...to have a relationship with one of the world best athletes. God<br />

bless Seve, ADEMÁS DE CAMPEÓN, AMIGO.<br />

Martin Samuel (<strong>The</strong> Daily Mail)<br />

“ More than any other player he brought the sport to the masses,<br />

the working class, the young. We thought he was just like us, yet<br />

he was so much more. He was a great champion and he was the<br />

people’s champion. <strong>An</strong>d he always will be.”<br />

John Hopkins (<strong>The</strong> Times)<br />

“ Some people are born to sing or dance, some to play the piano.<br />

Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> was born to play golf.”<br />

Paul Hayward (<strong>The</strong> Observer)<br />

“ Notable sportsmen and sportswomen leave us every week and<br />

stock phrases of sorrow are rolled out <strong>by</strong> people who never met<br />

them, but few will depart to so much anguish as Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong>.”<br />

Javier Pinedo (Canal+ Golf)<br />

“ Our idol is gone. Along with Julio Iglesias and Placido Domingo,<br />

he was the best ambassador we have ever had for our country. If<br />

there is something special I would like to remember about Seve,<br />

it is what defines him the best - his pride to be the best golfer<br />

ever. When we take a look at the World Ranking now, and see the<br />

<strong>European</strong> control, we consider it normal, but it is thanks to the<br />

pride Seve transmitted to all the players in the ‘Old Continent’,<br />

something inconceivable at that time, and that is what I consider<br />

his best and main legacy.”<br />

Carlos Arribas (El País)<br />

“ He changed the history of golf not only in Europe but also in<br />

the United States. <strong>The</strong>re has been no other individual figure<br />

with so much influence in the development of his sport. He<br />

brought life and oxygen to an ancient sport. He was a wild and<br />

courageous man and a proud spirit. His soul was the soul of<br />

somebody who knew he was special and unique.”<br />

Nick Pitt (<strong>The</strong> Sunday Times)<br />

“ He was the most brilliant and influential golfer of his time; he<br />

did more than anybody to lift the status of <strong>European</strong> golf, to<br />

build its <strong>Tour</strong> and to turn <strong>The</strong> Ryder Cup into one of the world’s<br />

premier sporting events. “<br />

David Facey (<strong>The</strong> Sun)<br />

“ Seve leaves the glorious legacy as the most exciting and<br />

arguably the best loved player ever to hold a golf club.”<br />

Kevin Garside (<strong>The</strong> Daily Telegraph)<br />

“ Seve was a golfing blood transfusion, a fist-pumping,<br />

slim-hipped fairway Elvis with hair that shimmered and eyes<br />

that blazed.”<br />

Jim Holden (Sunday Express)<br />

“ Seve was the hero who embodied everything we hope to find in<br />

a sportsman – chivalry, genius, panache, courage, spellbinding<br />

magnetism and an unquenchable will to win.”<br />

James Lawton (<strong>The</strong> Independent)<br />

“ <strong>The</strong>re were times when the golf of <strong>Ballesteros</strong> was almost<br />

incidental. <strong>The</strong> passion and the grace and the burning eyes and<br />

the windswept hair and the noble head and the fist-pumping<br />

self belief were what commanded the attention of his people<br />

as much as the superb anarchy of his play.”<br />

Isabel Trillo (Spanish Golf Writer)<br />

“ Seve made me understand the greatness of this sport through<br />

shots I could not understand at the beginning, but which later I<br />

realised were unrepeatable in other hands. Even in his decline,<br />

when his back was hurting, I enjoyed following him on the golf<br />

course. He always gave us one of his magic shots. Thank you,<br />

Seve, for making me a better person.”<br />

Richard Williams (<strong>The</strong> Guardian)<br />

“ In good times and bad <strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> never failed to<br />

remind us of why we fell in love with the sport in the first<br />

place. Watching him play in his gorgeous prime, swept along<br />

on gusts of glory, improvising with an artist’s instinct and<br />

touch, was an infallibly life–affirming experience. Watching him<br />

during the long years of decline was a reminder of mortality.”<br />

<strong>An</strong>dy Dunn (News of the World)<br />

“ Occasionally, he was afforded the full magisterial sweep of his<br />

name. <strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong>. Say it. It flows like a beautiful golf<br />

swing. To the world, though, he was always Seve. Simply Seve.<br />

A word that spread a smile across every sport lover’s face. <strong>An</strong>d<br />

in death, still does.”<br />

María Acacia López-Bachiller (<strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> Spanish Press Officer)<br />

“ I started working with Seve at the 1974 Spanish Open. We became friends. I had the privilege of spending 28 years of my<br />

life very close to Seve, not the legend or the golfer, but my friend. I shared many moments with him; victories, defeats,<br />

fights, joy, frustration… but especially very long conversations in which we turned the whole world of golf upside down. I<br />

sat next to him at hundreds of press conferences, many were very interesting, others amusing and a few very tense when<br />

he was in his fighting mood! We shared lunches, dinners and travelled together. One trip I will never forget in April 1997<br />

– we went to the opening of a golf course in Portugal and, from there, we travelled to Valderrama <strong>by</strong> helicopter. We flew<br />

along the Portuguese and Spanish coast, the Gulf of Cádiz and the mouths of the Guadiana and Guadalquivir rivers; the<br />

helicopter was flying so low that we could appreciate everything, it was one of the most beautiful trips I’ve ever taken. I<br />

was very pleased when he married Carmen Botín, an excellent person who left her life behind and gave him everything<br />

she had. I remember how happy he was when their children were born, he was a very proud daddy, especially when little<br />

Carmen called him ‘Papote.’ Seve, you thanked me many times for being your friend and taking care of you. Be sure that<br />

from now on, I will always be there for Javier, Miguel and Carmen.”<br />

<strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011 <strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011


<strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong>, the <strong>Tour</strong> Players<br />

Foundation and Wentworth Club would<br />

like to thank the following for their<br />

contributions to Olé Seve<br />

All individuals & companies purchasing Amateur Teams<br />

All competing <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> Professionals<br />

Mark Roe, Denis Pugh, Hugh Marr & Simon Holmes<br />

BMW<br />

<strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> Productions<br />

Dom Pérignon<br />

Moët & Chandon<br />

Marqués de Riscal<br />

Graeme Baxter & Baxter Golf Art<br />

Bushnell/Bolle<br />

Thomas Lyte<br />

Joe Malone<br />

Titleist<br />

All individuals & companies contributing to auction lots<br />

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS<br />

ABOUT THE SEVE BALLESTEROS FOUNDATION<br />

In October 2008, Seve faced the “toughest of raising funds for research into this<br />

match of his life”. He collapsed at Madrid devastating disease.<br />

Airport and following the discovery of a brain <strong>The</strong> Foundation has already enjoyed great<br />

tumour the size of two golf balls, underwent success in its inaugural year, raising £700,000<br />

four debilitating operations, chemotherapy and so far. In July, the Foundation raised over<br />

radiotherapy. It was Seve’s spirit, together with £100,000 at the Open Championship and<br />

the skills and expertise of surgeons, that gave September saw the inaugural Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong><br />

him what he calls now “my second chance”. Foundation Pro-Am tournament take place<br />

More than 4,600 adults are diagnosed at Foxhills Club & Resort, Surrey, where over<br />

with cancerous tumours of the brain and £60,000 was raised. <strong>The</strong> highlight of the year<br />

central nervous system each year in the UK. was the Foundation’s flagship event, Viva la<br />

ABOUT Unfortunately, THE only SEVE 15% of these BALLESTEROS will survive Vida, which FOUNDATION<br />

saw 400 guests, celebrities and<br />

for five years or more after their diagnosis. golfers come together to pay tribute to Seve<br />

In October 2008, Seve began the toughest match of<br />

Brain tumours are difficult to detect and treat and his celebrate life. He collapsed <strong>European</strong> at Golf’s Madrid stellar Airport season.<br />

and following the discovery of a brain tumour the size of two golf balls, underwent four<br />

as many symptoms are not specific to brain <strong>The</strong> Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> Foundation has made<br />

debilitating operations, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. It was Seve’s spirit, together with<br />

tumours, and can differ depending on where great strides this year in raising funds for<br />

the skills and expertise of surgeons, that saw him battle the tumour for nearly three years<br />

before in he the finally brain the lost tumour the fight is situated. on the morning With the of Saturday world class May brain 7, 2011. cancer research projects. To<br />

challenges around understanding brain cancer continue our work and help Seve achieve his<br />

More than 4,600 adults are diagnosed with cancerous <strong>The</strong> Foundation has already enjoyed great success,<br />

and how to treat it, it is imperative that we find aim, we need your help. To find out how you<br />

tumours of the brain and central nervous system each year raising £700,000 so far. In July 2010, the Foundation raised<br />

in the UK. new Unfortunately, ways to diagnose only 15% of and these treat will this survive disease. more can than support £100,000 the at <strong>The</strong> Seve Open <strong>Ballesteros</strong> Championship Foundation<br />

and in<br />

for five years or more after their diagnosis. Brain tumours<br />

are difficult Following to detect and Seve’s treat as own many diagnosis, symptoms he are has<br />

September, the inaugural Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> Foundation Proplease<br />

visit:<br />

Am tournament took place at Foxhills Club & Resort, Surrey,<br />

not specific vowed to brain to help tumours, those and in can a similar differ depending position<br />

on where in the brain the tumour is situated. With the<br />

challenges to himself. around understanding In 2009, Seve brain set cancer up the and Seve how to<br />

where www.seveballesterosfoundation.org<br />

over £60,000 was raised. <strong>The</strong> highlight of the year<br />

was the Foundation’s flagship event, Viva la Vida, which saw<br />

On course to beat brain cancer.<br />

400 guests, celebrities and golfers come together to pay<br />

treat it, <strong>Ballesteros</strong> it is imperative Foundation that we find new in partnership ways to diagnose with<br />

and treat this disease.<br />

Cancer Research UK, with the ambition<br />

tribute to Seve and celebrate <strong>European</strong> golf’s stellar season.<br />

Supporting<br />

<strong>The</strong> Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> Foundation has made further strides<br />

Following Seve’s own diagnosis, he vowed to help those in this year in raising funds for world class brain cancer<br />

a similar position to himself and, in 2009, set up the Seve research projects. Supporting To continue our work and help Seve<br />

<strong>Ballesteros</strong> Foundation in partnership with Cancer Research achieve his aim, we need your help. To find out how you can<br />

UK, with the ambition of raising funds for research into this support the Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> Foundation please visit<br />

devastating disease.<br />

www.seveballesterosfoundation.org<br />

FORMAT<br />

Par is your friend – All birdies (net or gross)<br />

count for team score.<br />

Full handicap allowance - 18 for men,<br />

18 for ladies<br />

PRIZES<br />

1st, 2nd & 3rd Team Prize<br />

Longest Drive (Amateurs Only) - 12th Hole<br />

In “Seve’s Aid of the Trouble Seve Shot <strong>Ballesteros</strong> Challenge” Foundation, May available 23, 2011, for pre-round <strong>The</strong> West coaching course, - Mark Roe, Wentworth club<br />

(Amateurs Only) - 16th IN AID Hole OF THE SEVE BALLESTEROS Denis Pugh, FOUNDATION<br />

Hugh Marr & Simon Holmes<br />

EVENT INFORMATION<br />

MENUS<br />

Seve is renowned as one of 23RD the MAY greatest 2011, THE WEST COURSE, WENTWORTH CLUB<br />

Pre-Round Brunch – Traditional Full English Breakfast<br />

FORMAT ‘Trouble Shot’ exponents golf has ever<br />

12:30<br />

Par is your friend – All birdies (net or gross) count for<br />

because On Course of this research Refreshments that I am able to<br />

team seen, score. take up his ‘nearest the pin’ bunker Players congregate in ‘Turning Circle’ for<br />

have 1st an Tee, extra 9th time Tee, that 14th years Hole ago would<br />

shot challenge.<br />

not All transportation have Tees happened. - Hildon Mineral to their Water respective tees<br />

Hola and welcome to Olé Seve and to<br />

Wentworth, one of my favourites places<br />

with so many great memories. This is a big<br />

event for the Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> Foundation<br />

and its strong partnership with Cancer<br />

Research UK and I am very honoured that<br />

so many of my great friends and colleagues<br />

in the world of golf have found time to help<br />

our cause. It has been a difficult time in my<br />

life with the brain tumour, but there is no<br />

other option than to accept the situation<br />

and fight against it.<br />

Thousands of others suffer from this<br />

severe illness every day, but not all are so<br />

fortunate to fight the disease. This is the<br />

reason why my family and I decided to<br />

create the Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> Foundation and<br />

contribute to help others.<br />

My doctors have been exceptional but I<br />

also know that <strong>by</strong> funding research into brain<br />

cancer, the Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> Foundation in<br />

partnership with Cancer Research UK has<br />

already made huge strides and I know it is<br />

Full handicap allowance – 18 for men and ladies<br />

PRIZES MENUS<br />

1st, 2nd & 3rd Team<br />

Pre-Round Brunch – Traditional Full<br />

Longest Drive (Amateurs Only) - 12th Hole<br />

Nearest English the Pin Breakfast (Amateurs with Only) all - 2nd the Hole trimmings<br />

ITINERARY On Course Refreshments - 1st Tee,<br />

10.00 9th – Tee, 12.00 14th Registration Hole & Brunch - Wentworth Club<br />

Ballroom<br />

Valet Parking or Bag Drop available in<br />

Evening Function Wentworth – Wentworth Club ‘Turning presents Circle’<br />

11:15 ‘A – Taste 12.30 Spain’ Practice Range & Putting Green open -<br />

BMW PGA Practice Facilities<br />

Europe’s leading long & short game<br />

Champagne & Wines<br />

coaches available for pre-round coaching –<br />

Dom Perignon Mark - Vintage Roe, Denis 2002, Pugh, Marques Hugh Marr de &<br />

Simon Holmes<br />

Riscal - Grand Reserve & Sauvignon<br />

12:15 Players congregate in ‘Turning Circle’ for<br />

transportation to their respective tees<br />

13:00 Entertainment Shotgun start<br />

18:00 Cabaret approx - Alejandra Players transported Velasco, back Flamenco to the clubhouse<br />

18:00 Champagne Reception, Casual Dining,<br />

Dancer with Prize accompanying Giving & Auction guitarist<br />

20:00 Master of Ceremonies Evening function - <strong>An</strong>drew ends Cotter<br />

Evening Auctioneer Function - Dress Jonny Code Gould<br />

Informal/Golf Attire. Pro-Am Teams Wives & Partners are<br />

welcome to attend<br />

ITINERARY<br />

10.00 - 12.00<br />

Registration & Brunch -<br />

Wentworth Club Ballroom<br />

Valet Parking or Bag Drop available in<br />

Wentworth Club ‘Turning Circle’<br />

11:15 - 12.30<br />

Practice Range & Putting Green open -<br />

BMW PGA Practice Facilities<br />

Europe’s leading long & short game coaches<br />

What can I say about Wentworth, and the<br />

famous Evening West Function<br />

Course? I have so many great<br />

memories. I loved the place, and the fans,<br />

13:00<br />

from the moment I first played in the World<br />

Match Champagne Play in 1976. & Everyone Wines knows how<br />

much Dom I enjoy Perignon match play and it was wonderful<br />

to win that title five times. <strong>The</strong> last time was<br />

Marques de Riscal<br />

in 1991 18:00 – the approx same year I won another great<br />

event at Wentworth, the PGA Championship<br />

Entertainment<br />

– so Players it is truly special transported to celebrate the back 20th to<br />

anniversary of those wins with this event.<br />

the clubhouse<br />

In golf, and in illness, we all have to be<br />

Auctioneer - Jonny Gould<br />

patient, never give up and keep believing that<br />

we will win. So I say to you, my dear friends<br />

18:00<br />

in this wonderful game, a big thank you for<br />

supporting the Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> Foundation.<br />

Wentworth presents ‘A Taste of Spain’<br />

Shot gun start – Rocket to be used<br />

Cabaret - Flamenco Dancer with Spanish band<br />

Master of Ceremonies - <strong>An</strong>drew Cotter<br />

All proceeds will go to the Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> Foundation working in a partnership with<br />

All proceeds will go Cancer to the Research Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> UK Registered Foundation Charity Number working 1089464 in a partnership with<br />

Cancer Research UK Registered Charity Number 1089464<br />

This publication is edited and published <strong>by</strong> the Communications<br />

Division of <strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong>, Wentworth Drive, Virginia Water, Surrey, GU25 4LX<br />

Tel: +44 (0) 1344 840400 Fax: +44 (0) 1344 840444<br />

Email: media@europeantour.com<br />

<strong>The</strong><br />

Champagne<br />

<strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong>,<br />

Reception,<br />

the <strong>Tour</strong> Players<br />

Casual<br />

Foundation and<br />

Wentworth Club would like to thank the following for their<br />

contributions Dining, Prize to Giving Olé Seve! & Auction<br />

All individuals Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> & companies purchasing Amateur Teams<br />

All 20:00 competing <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> Professionals<br />

Mark Roe, Denis Pugh, Hugh Marr & Simon Holmes<br />

Evening function ends<br />

BMW<br />

<strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> Productions<br />

Moët Hennessy<br />

Evening Function Dress Code<br />

Marqués de Riscal<br />

Graeme Informal/Golf Baxter & Attire. Baxter Golf Pro-Am Art Teams<br />

Bushnell/Bolle<br />

Thomas Wives Lyte & Partners are welcome to attend<br />

Titleist<br />

All individuals & companies contributing to auction lots<br />

A range of video and audio tributes to Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong><br />

are available at www.europeantour.com<br />

<strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011 <strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011


PLAYER TRIBUTES<br />

Thomas Björn:<br />

“ He was brilliant and talented. A genius and a gentleman.<br />

Everything you could wish for in a sportsman and<br />

someone to idolise. He was fantastic to watch. Although<br />

I came on the scene towards the end of his career I could<br />

only imagine what he must have been like at his peak. A<br />

man you would definitely prefer to watch than to face as<br />

an opponent.”<br />

Ken Brown:<br />

“ We in Britain loved Seve so much that we can forget the<br />

impact he had across the whole of Europe, giving so many<br />

non-golfing people an interest in the game. In a way he<br />

was our Arnold Palmer. But it does Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> a<br />

disservice to compare him to anybody. He was unique. He<br />

was Seve. Say no more.”<br />

Paul Casey:<br />

“ He really blazed the trail for <strong>European</strong>s. Not only in <strong>The</strong><br />

Ryder Cup, but also in how he played at Augusta and his<br />

victories over in America. We owe a huge amount to him.”<br />

Eamonn Darcy:<br />

“ He was one of the most loved players ever to put on a pair<br />

of golf shoes.”<br />

Ernie Els:<br />

“ Seve was an absolute hero of mine and I modelled so<br />

much of my game on him. I was very fortunate to have<br />

had the opportunity to play with him many times and the<br />

most memorable was our battle in the World Match Play<br />

of 1994. It was an unforgettable day and I feel honoured<br />

that I was able to share centre stage with him. <strong>The</strong> world<br />

of golf has lost one of its greatest heroes.”<br />

Sir Nick Faldo:<br />

“ For golf, he was the greatest show on earth. I was a fan<br />

and so fortunate that I had a front-row seat.”<br />

David Feherty:<br />

“ I remember looking at Seve in the team room at <strong>The</strong><br />

1991 Ryder Cup and thinking to myself that he seemed<br />

physically smaller than when I saw him on the golf course<br />

or on television. <strong>An</strong>y other week other than <strong>The</strong> Ryder<br />

Cup, he didn’t know me very well. But that one week he<br />

cared so much that he went out of his way to make me<br />

feel like I was a friend of his. I only realised in retrospect<br />

that it wasn’t that he looked smaller – it was that he made<br />

me feel bigger.”<br />

Bernard Gallacher:<br />

“ Every <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> player today should thank Seve for<br />

what they’re playing for. America had Jack Nicklaus and<br />

Arnold Palmer - Seve was our Arnold Palmer and Jack<br />

Nicklaus rolled into one. You can’t speak too highly of him.”<br />

Sergio Garcia:<br />

“ He inspired me so much throughout my career and I<br />

admired him above all for his fighting spirit - never more<br />

so than in the manner in which he battled this terrible<br />

illness. It is the most enormous loss to the world of sport<br />

to lose this great man although he will be remembered<br />

and loved forever.”<br />

Padraig Harrington:<br />

“ Seve was the most charismatic and artistic golfer I have<br />

ever seen play the game. He helped the tremendous<br />

growth of <strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> during the 1970’s and the<br />

1980’s and inspired all those players who came after him.”<br />

Hale Irwin:<br />

“ He was one of the best players in the era in which I<br />

played. <strong>The</strong>re were very few players who you could simply<br />

call <strong>by</strong> a name like Arnie, Jack or Lee and know who<br />

exactly it was. He was one of those guys.”<br />

Tony Jacklin:<br />

“ Does any one shot stand out? Not really, the impossible<br />

was being done all the time. He did things other players<br />

couldn’t do. <strong>The</strong>re was only one Seve.”<br />

Bernhard Langer:<br />

“ He meant so much to <strong>European</strong> golf. He had his battles<br />

with the <strong>European</strong> and the US <strong>Tour</strong>s but he showed<br />

the rest of the world that we had some great players in<br />

Europe. When we saw that Seve could win Majors and<br />

tournaments all over the world, it gave us the belief that<br />

we could do the same thing. I was blessed to live at the<br />

same time as him and see one of the greatest golfers ever<br />

in action so many times.”<br />

Davis Love III:<br />

“ He was somebody that I looked up to. I copied his swing.<br />

Everybody wanted to be as exciting as Seve.”<br />

Miguel <strong>An</strong>gel Jiménez:<br />

“ He was outstanding for his determination and his passion in everything he did. He<br />

never gave up, he always found a way out, and this was reflected in his personality.<br />

I have lived so many moments with him that it’s hard to choose one. I would maybe<br />

highlight the 1997 Ryder Cup, where I was his assistant. It was a truly special week.”<br />

Ramon <strong>Sota</strong>:<br />

“ He had everything. One of the most beautiful houses, a beautiful family, a great career to<br />

remember and he was a great player everybody loved. This should have been the time he was able<br />

to say ‘<strong>The</strong> world is mine now.’ I’m 73 years old but suddenly there are no more chances for him.<br />

Fifty four years old. Adios. It’s tough, it’s just not fair. This was not right for my nephew.”<br />

Matteo Manassero:<br />

“ We have lost somebody who meant so much to everyone<br />

in golf. To me, he was the best player and the most<br />

inspiring player in the world. I met him for the first time<br />

when I was four years old and he was my idol ever since<br />

then. He inspired me then and he will continue to inspire<br />

me throughout my career.”<br />

Paul McGinley:<br />

“ Nobody in the game has ever had the same charisma.<br />

When he smiled the whole world smiled with him…he<br />

lived his life in a very emotional way and that’s what<br />

made him so enduring.”<br />

Phil Mickelson:<br />

“ To me the greatest thing about Seve was his flair and<br />

his charisma. Because of the way he played the game<br />

of golf, you were drawn to him. You wanted to go watch<br />

him play.”<br />

Francesco Molinari:<br />

“ Seve was a superhero for all young golfers. He played<br />

shots only he could see.”<br />

Colin Montgomerie:<br />

“ <strong>The</strong>re are very few legends in the world, Seve is one of<br />

them. I never saw such a talent to swing a golf club, and<br />

we may never see it again. We have lost one of the great<br />

icons of the game, it is a great loss for Spain, for Europe<br />

and for the world. But he has left us with so many<br />

wonderful lasting memories and his contributions to<br />

<strong>European</strong> golf are unquantifiable.”<br />

Jack Nicklaus:<br />

“ Golf has lost a great champion and a great friend. We have<br />

also lost a great entertainer and ambassador for our sport.<br />

It was his creativity, his imagination, and his desire to<br />

compete that made him so popular not only in Europe but<br />

throughout American galleries, too. We can only imagine<br />

how difficult this battle has been for him and his family the<br />

last few years, but I know Seve faced it with the same grit,<br />

fight and spirit he approached his golf career.”<br />

Arnold Palmer:<br />

“ Seve was a great guy and an outstanding competitor.<br />

I considered him to be a good friend of mine. His<br />

dynamic talent was evident from the time he first<br />

arrived on the scene.”<br />

Nick Price:<br />

“ He was an incredible golfer. He was always very kind to<br />

me and his love for the game and his competitiveness<br />

was something I learned so much from. He was just an<br />

incredible personality. I think all of us who played with him<br />

or spent any time with him are the richer for it.”<br />

José Rivero:<br />

“ Many memories come to mind, particularly from <strong>The</strong> Ryder<br />

Cup. <strong>The</strong> first time we won at <strong>The</strong> Belfry in 1985 was very<br />

special, and the next even more, because that time we<br />

won in the US. Seve was the soul of the team, the real<br />

Captain. He was the great driving force for golf in Spain<br />

and in Europe.”<br />

Sam Torrance:<br />

“ Without Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong>, where would we all be today?<br />

What would be the state of <strong>European</strong> golf and the<br />

interest in the sport around the world were it not for the<br />

charismatic Spaniard? <strong>The</strong>re was never a golfer like him<br />

and very few whose influence was so widespread. Seve<br />

had it all, the looks, the charm, the style and, of course, a<br />

remarkable talent.”<br />

Lee Westwood:<br />

“ It is a sad day. We have lost an inspiration, a genius, a<br />

role model, a hero and a friend. Seve gave his all for golf<br />

and what the game and <strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Tour</strong> particularly<br />

owes him is immense. We would not be playing where<br />

and for what we are today without him having graced<br />

the world’s fairways. He was iconic.”<br />

Tiger Woods:<br />

“ Seve was one of the most talented and exciting golfers to<br />

ever play the game. His creativity and inventiveness on the<br />

golf course may never be surpassed.”<br />

<strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011 <strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011


José Maria Olazábal and Seve <strong>Ballesteros</strong> formed the most<br />

successful partnership in Ryder Cup history. <strong>The</strong>ir hugely<br />

impressive record together reads: Played 15, Won 11, Lost 2,<br />

Halved 2, Total Points 12.<br />

José Maria and Seve played together in 15 consecutive<br />

foursome and fourball matches, beginning with the day one<br />

foursomes of 1987 and ending with the day two foursomes in<br />

1993. In 1987 they won three out of four matches together.<br />

José María Olazábal said: “My first memory of Seve goes back to 1983 and 1984. I was an amateur, and he<br />

called me to play in a charity event. It was a big surprise and I was very excited. It’s hard to choose one of the<br />

many moments that I lived with him, but surely the most cherished are Ryder Cup moments, particular the<br />

1997 edition.<br />

“What impressed most in Seve was his strength, his fighting spirit and the passion he put into everything he<br />

did. I saw him for the last time the Saturday after the Masters. He was not well, but his head was clear. We<br />

talked about many things… so many common memories, and particularly about <strong>The</strong> Ryder Cup.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> best tribute we can pay to Seve is to go on playing for him, although no tribute will ever do justice to<br />

everything he did for golf and to everything he gave us.”<br />

<strong>Severiano</strong> <strong>Ballesteros</strong> <strong>Sota</strong>: 1957-2011<br />

In both the 1989 and 1991 Ryder Cups the duo claimed three<br />

and a half points out of a possible four. <strong>The</strong>ir partnership<br />

ended in 1993 with two points from their three games.<br />

<strong>The</strong>ir friendship was as strong off the course as it was on it<br />

and it was no surprise that when José Maria was named as<br />

Captain of <strong>The</strong> 2012 <strong>European</strong> Ryder Cup Team, the first man<br />

he called was Seve.

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