I was 11 years old at the PGA Champ. In Oklahoma 1988 (practice putt green), I said "Mr. Ballesteros, you are the best, you are number 1" He said " Young man you are very clever,...that is correct".
17 years ago I was a photographer for a small local golfing magazine , Seve was playing in a pro am, the golf writer instructed me to call him Mr Ballesteros all the time. The result? He invited us to walk the course with him, a true gentleman who shot seven under while laughing and joking with an adoring crowd. A perfect day I will long remember.
Seve walked thru a crowd of people, passed myself and onto the practice area at The Belfry for the 1989 Ryder Cup. As he emerged from the crowd, he was greeted with the loudest crowd 'roar' and applause that sent a shiver of pride down my spine. The 'main man' had just entered the arena... and we all knew it!!! Heaven knows how an American golfer felt at hearing that sound from all of us. (the spectators). The atmosphere was electric, and we were only on the practice area!! This video bought back all the memories of Seve on that day. The sound of the ball strike is exactly as I remember it. A pure, crisp 'crack' as the club struck the ball. With The Belfry just 10 mins away from where I live, I've been lucky enough to have attended three Ryder Cups and seen many great players at The Belfry over the years... but no-one comes close to Save Ballesteros. In my mind, Seve had the greatest golf swing you will ever see live!
Ive got a number of photos of Seve in full flow, when I looked at them closely and well zoomed in i swear on my life you can see an electric field round Seve like the old ready break adverts of the glowing kid walking to school (if you are english and about 40?) ...I got one shot of him at Lytham in the open and he's literally got a vortex of energy coming out of the top of his head....in purple/blue...so faint but its there i promise you. I paint artwork of seve so I notice the detail in the photos. Then he goes and dies of a brain tumor. coincidence? Probably he was 'plugged in' to some sort of cosmic energy but his brain couldnt take it. Ive seen him play in the open and its like experiencing a localised storm rolling in across the golf course...the static electricity like you said was amazing. That is something special.
@neilpidgeon6150 I just want to say I could almost have written your message based on my one close up experience with Seve. In the late 80’s I used to go to the world matchplay and PGA at Wentworth and whilst reminiscing about it recently with an old golf buddy he asked who was impressive. I said certain things stick in my mind, like how big Faldo was, how the best strike I ever witnessed was a Brett Ogle tee shot off the 1st, but what was most striking was that if you stood anywhere near Seve you felt this strange field of energy coming off him. I couldn’t explain it any clearer than saying it was like a magnetic force that enveloped him. Never felt it before or since. I was definitely not normal and I have no explanation for it to this day. So I was pleased to see your message. Hope you are well!
Can’t believe he’s gone. For a time he was the greatest golfer ever! There will never be another Seve. So much fun to watch on TV. When he was in form, he had no equal.
Pure poetry. This was before his back problems started affecting his swing. This is THE best swing ever from THE most charismatic and talented sportsman ever. And thats across all sports, not just golf.
Totally agree. The greatest swing ever. In 1990 when his back problems became too severe his swing had to change & he was never as free and flamboyant as he was in his prime.. Without the back problems Seve would have doubled his major tally.
When Seve smiled the whole world smiled with him, when Seve scowled everyone looked down at their toes. A beautiful classical golf swing, a fantastic competitor, a great man. I have been fortunate to see many wonderful golfers over the decades but Seve was very very special.
Amazing, I used to go to Wentworth for match play and PGA, followed seve on many occasions, my favourite 2 golfers ever him and faldo, these were the days when golf was exciting, not like today, I just can't explain to people just how charismatic the golfers were in the 80s and 90s, not the money making machines of today, they played golf because they loved it and that came through in the atmosphere that they created. True giants, the gods of golf
Just perfection. Best tempo I have ever seen. Seve was an underrated artist. A golfing genius without given his just due. Nicklaus and Woods don’t swing it that well, and never will.
I can give you he had better swing than Nicklaus but Woods? Come on. Woods made it look so so easy(and still does) due to the fact he was not only a perfectionist but athletic.
The young Maestro at work, beautiful to watch, free flowing, graceful power. This is the way a golf club should be swung. Was lucky enough to see him practice at 1985 Ryder Cup and that was special. Sadly did not have a video camera. Long live the King!
This is poetry in motion. An inspiring piece of film, that wants me to get down the range and start hitting balls. If only I could hit them like that....
Seve was the reason I started playing golf we all wanted to play like him swashbuckling his escapes from troublesome positions are legendary I always say my claim to fame is I've been to places on a golf course that seve had never been an absolute genius and legend so charismatic too only one Severiano Ballesteros 😀⛳🏌️R.I.P legend
This is a treasured video, thank so much! What a wonderful effortless swing, beautiful balance, high follow through, magical setup. Just so nice to watch. I like the swings of Snead, Hogan, Weiskopf, Geiberger, Els and many more but Seve's really stood out. Playing in the 80's my self, a great swing and result was what golf was all about, pure sounds with blade irons hitting blata balls in the sweet spot only! I do miss golf, until watching this video I need to head down to the range again, Young players please pay ATTENTION, watch and learn, the grip, the stance, the knees, shoulders and don't forget the follow through, never HIT a ball, strike it effortlessly, rhythm, think rhythm. Go to the range, I use to play 12 hours day in my school holidays!
Apparently, he used to fine the caddy if he lost one. I also heard tale of his caddy standing with a baseball glove catching wedge shots and barely having to move. Not sure if that's true, but it's a good story.
David, thanks so much for this. For some time now, I have tried to watch video of Seve before I play, trying to capture that rhythm. This was a magical tape - it speaks to the beautiful swing and the striking. I met Seve in Madrid a few years ago, and I'm very happy I did. The one thing I wanted to tell him was how much pleasure he had given to so many people, and I think he appreciated that. With his health falling apart, and his marriage failing, and unshaven on the course playing the Madrid Open, there was still something very, very special about following him, as I did for several holes, inside the ropes. I even saw him subtly trying to intimidate an official into giving him a drop (which he didn't get). I first saw Seve live at Moyola Park in N Ireland (video available on CZcams) when he did all the putter tricks on the putting green before teeing off - he'd won The Masters that year, and although he shot around par that day, he was wonderful to watch in all departments of the game. I also saw him live at Oak Hill in the Ryder Cup, when he lost to Tom Lehman in the singles - BUT Lehman hit every green in regulation, and Seve was all over the place, and still took Lehman to the 15th. RIP Seve. Thanks again, David.
I followed Seve around Wentworth. He was a birdie machine, pure genius. I saw him Captain the European team to victory in the Ryder Cup. He wanted to win so much, not being able to play in that Ryder cup was so difficult for him. In his prime he is among the greatest if not the greatest to have ever played the game.
Although he came from a poor background he was a natural aristocrat. His sometimes erratic tendencies, along with his back problems, meant his haul of major championships was relatively slim in the end but that's not his legacy. He was the game's true cavalier and greatest artist. I watched this video all the way through and felt sad when it ended. Only a few really transcend their sport and Seve was one of them. And that swing was a thing of effortless beauty.There's no tension in it which is why you can watch him hit the ball over and over again. Majestic.
Thanks for the input, he certainly oozes pure class! I remember watching him during a practice round at the World Matchplay and a young boy said you didn't hit that seven very far, Seve said he was controlling the distance , then preceded to hit the same club another twenty yards longer! He could make the ball do anything!
Watched him play at Westchester CC during the old Buick classic. I believe in 1988 when he won. He walked out of the clubhouse to the range like a Greek God. A Spartan ready for battle. This man had an aura. Thanks for the video
When Tiger said Seve was "virtually unbeatable at his best", he was referrering to when Seve swang the club like this. His short game always stood second to none. So this is as good as it gets in golf gents.
Simply a beautiful, effortless swing; his game never seemed to be the same , after he hooked that 4 iron into the pond on the last day of the '86 masters; just perfect ball striking.
The footwork is amazing. When he takes the club back, he looks like he is standing on a crate of eggs and doesn’t wAnt to break them. Amazing how he is connected to the ground.
I watched Seve hitting balls on the range at Wentworth - I've watched Greg Norman, Faldo, Els, Elkington and loads more from that era. Can honestly say his ball striking was the most memorable...he went out and shot 65 that day so was on form. Glad I got to experience it, every shot followed exactly the same trajectory, same shape. Was mesmerising ..
The most impressive (everything else is impressive BTW!) thing I found with Seve, was his posture at address. Equipment wise 'Slazenger' were once a great golfing company.
I am not native, but this lovely video has some lovely comments. 2:47 "The strike, you hear it?" 3:13 "Pure, pure". 3:40 (what did you say there?) 4:45 "Makes me wanna clap!" 5:36 "The noise it makes. He just makes a different noise to his guy". 6:36 "..... (what?) .... tomorrow morning".
Watching Seve hitting blades, when golf was more about art than technology. I think hearing the crowd roar when he hit it in the water at the 86 Masters was something he never got over. He knew they wanted Jack to win, broke his heart.
I played with Slazenger's Seve blades for about four years. High quality forged irons with no off-set. Nickel plated too, so that if the chrome wore thin, there was a vaguely brass-coloured tinge to the club face.
If anybody had more influence the Seve in the 80s and 90s I have yet to see them . Myself and a gang of hackers would get to our ball in a difficult position and the words were always the same "if Seve had this shot he would do xxxxxx" True legend and sadly missed in the UK God bless him and RIP Seve
I once had the privilege to see him hit similar practice shots standing very close to him. Two things struck me: crisp contact shot after shot, and most importantly the absolute softness of his arms and hands.
I saw Seve at Torrey Pines when he was playing the tour back in the 80s. I got close enough to him that I made a point of walking in his footsteps for about ten paces.
I hear you as I idolized Seve and sometimes I imagine myself as him when I’m playing golf in hopes of some of his magic somehow influencing my swing. He was as close to perfect as a human being could be. Looks, intelligence, talent, presence, charisma, swing, humility, character, courage, short game.......and on and on. Had he more luck, like he needed any, he would have won 11 majors. ‘76 Open, ‘82 Masters, ‘85 Masters, ‘86 Masters, ‘87 Masters, ‘89 Masters. He almost won the US Open one year as well. Was he any good?
@@aha3885 yes, I admired him. Jack was "my guy" but it hurt to see him lose both the 1986 and 1987 Masters. He could have easily won one if not both of those. What a great player and competitor.
Die InternetFahrschule I don't know anything about golf, but I can see this is poetry. My dad won a round with him in a raffle in the early 90s and I wanted to see him in action. God bless the internet :)
Absolute genius at work, so much rhythm & grace. He never forces the shot, it’s just poetry in motion, effortless power instead of powerless effort. What is incredible is that how did he lose this magic??
I was 11 years old at the PGA Champ. In Oklahoma 1988 (practice putt green), I said "Mr. Ballesteros, you are the best, you are number 1"
He said " Young man you are very clever,...that is correct".
Seve in a nutshell 😂
17 years ago I was a photographer for a small local golfing magazine , Seve was playing in a pro am, the golf writer instructed me to call him Mr Ballesteros all the time. The result? He invited us to walk the course with him, a true gentleman who shot seven under while laughing and joking with an adoring crowd. A perfect day I will long remember.
Wow ❤
Amazing!! Legend
That's brilliant mate,something liv golf can never compete with..
That’s not golf, it’s art. RIP Seve
Perfection - artistry - none of the crazy smash it stuff of today's. RIP Seve
I could watch this all day. The timing and rhythm here is ridiculously good.
Just think, if not for this video this moment would be lost in time.... thank goodness we still have this beautiful piece of history.
Agree. Imagine if had similar for Snead too
@@combobulate8114 czcams.com/video/TT68ZSiiPqE/video.html
True 👍 ✔️
Seve walked thru a crowd of people, passed myself and onto the practice area at The Belfry for the 1989 Ryder Cup. As he emerged from the crowd, he was greeted with the loudest crowd 'roar' and applause that sent a shiver of pride down my spine. The 'main man' had just entered the arena... and we all knew it!!! Heaven knows how an American golfer felt at hearing that sound from all of us. (the spectators). The atmosphere was electric, and we were only on the practice area!! This video bought back all the memories of Seve on that day. The sound of the ball strike is exactly as I remember it. A pure, crisp 'crack' as the club struck the ball. With The Belfry just 10 mins away from where I live, I've been lucky enough to have attended three Ryder Cups and seen many great players at The Belfry over the years... but no-one comes close to Save Ballesteros. In my mind, Seve had the greatest golf swing you will ever see live!
Ive got a number of photos of Seve in full flow, when I looked at them closely and well zoomed in i swear on my life you can see an electric field round Seve like the old ready break adverts of the glowing kid walking to school (if you are english and about 40?) ...I got one shot of him at Lytham in the open and he's literally got a vortex of energy coming out of the top of his head....in purple/blue...so faint but its there i promise you. I paint artwork of seve so I notice the detail in the photos. Then he goes and dies of a brain tumor. coincidence? Probably he was 'plugged in' to some sort of cosmic energy but his brain couldnt take it. Ive seen him play in the open and its like experiencing a localised storm rolling in across the golf course...the static electricity like you said was amazing. That is something special.
It’s a tremendous swing. Beautiful finish. It’s my favorite though Ernie Els is sublime
Seve in full flow is the greatest golfer ever .
@neilpidgeon6150
I just want to say I could almost have written your message based on my one close up experience with Seve. In the late 80’s I used to go to the world matchplay and PGA at Wentworth and whilst reminiscing about it recently with an old golf buddy he asked who was impressive. I said certain things stick in my mind, like how big Faldo was, how the best strike I ever witnessed was a Brett Ogle tee shot off the 1st, but what was most striking was that if you stood anywhere near Seve you felt this strange field of energy coming off him. I couldn’t explain it any clearer than saying it was like a magnetic force that enveloped him. Never felt it before or since. I was definitely not normal and I have no explanation for it to this day. So I was pleased to see your message. Hope you are well!
@@alexchancockhis brothers say his best swing and best game was when he was 16.
Yes that’s how I remember the great Seve..had the pleasure to play on tour the same yr & be right there priceless time
Can’t believe he’s gone. For a time he was the greatest golfer ever! There will never be another Seve. So much fun to watch on TV. When he was in form, he had no equal.
The effortless motion through the swing and the balance is a god given talent RIP Seve
Definitely not. No one has that much talent in golf, it all takes work and repetition
@@thegolfdude he was naturally gifted. Yes, all greats have to work but he had a lot to work with naturally.
Pure poetry. This was before his back problems started affecting his swing. This is THE best swing ever from THE most charismatic and talented sportsman ever. And thats across all sports, not just golf.
I thought he was excellent when he was working with Leadbetter who got him swinging a bit flatter - that was about '88.
Totally agree. The greatest swing ever. In 1990 when his back problems became too severe his swing had to change & he was never as free and flamboyant as he was in his prime.. Without the back problems Seve would have doubled his major tally.
When Seve smiled the whole world smiled with him, when Seve scowled everyone looked down at their toes. A beautiful classical golf swing, a fantastic competitor, a great man.
I have been fortunate to see many wonderful golfers over the decades but Seve was very very special.
Stunning video David - makes me emotional watching it. Am extraordinarily pleased you took the time to put it up.
Me too. Loved the guy. In his prime there was no swing as graceful.
Amazing, I used to go to Wentworth for match play and PGA, followed seve on many occasions, my favourite 2 golfers ever him and faldo, these were the days when golf was exciting, not like today, I just can't explain to people just how charismatic the golfers were in the 80s and 90s, not the money making machines of today, they played golf because they loved it and that came through in the atmosphere that they created. True giants, the gods of golf
I think a large part of that is the equipment any clown can hit a giant ti driver. A persimmon headed one on the other hand is a different matter.
Seve's swing was a thing of beauty to me. Effortless, rhythmical, powerful and simple. RIP great man.
I watch this video every night before I play golfing
Just perfection. Best tempo I have ever seen. Seve was an underrated artist. A golfing genius without given his just due. Nicklaus and Woods don’t swing it that well, and never will.
lol 😂
33 Majors
I can give you he had better swing than Nicklaus but Woods? Come on. Woods made it look so so easy(and still does) due to the fact he was not only a perfectionist but athletic.
The young Maestro at work, beautiful to watch, free flowing, graceful power. This is the way a golf club should be swung. Was lucky enough to see him practice at 1985 Ryder Cup and that was special. Sadly did not have a video camera. Long live the King!
This is poetry in motion. An inspiring piece of film, that wants me to get down the range and start hitting balls. If only I could hit them like that....
I could watch Seve hitting golf balls like this all day. His swing looks so beautiful and effortless! My favourite golfer of all time by far!
Seve was the reason I started playing golf we all wanted to play like him swashbuckling his escapes from troublesome positions are legendary I always say my claim to fame is I've been to places on a golf course that seve had never been an absolute genius and legend so charismatic too only one Severiano Ballesteros 😀⛳🏌️R.I.P legend
This is a treasured video, thank so much! What a wonderful effortless swing, beautiful balance, high follow through, magical setup. Just so nice to watch. I like the swings of Snead, Hogan, Weiskopf, Geiberger, Els and many more but Seve's really stood out. Playing in the 80's my self, a great swing and result was what golf was all about, pure sounds with blade irons hitting blata balls in the sweet spot only! I do miss golf, until watching this video I need to head down to the range again, Young players please pay ATTENTION, watch and learn, the grip, the stance, the knees, shoulders and don't forget the follow through, never HIT a ball, strike it effortlessly, rhythm, think rhythm. Go to the range, I use to play 12 hours day in my school holidays!
Great video! The Champ at work! There will never be another Seve!
He’s my favourite golfer of all time. I see that the caddy is picking up the balls as he hits them. Very old school.....
Apparently, he used to fine the caddy if he lost one.
I also heard tale of his caddy standing with a baseball glove catching wedge shots and barely having to move. Not sure if that's true, but it's a good story.
@@DeadlyKiss000 old school as in old fashioned……
Greatest golf video of all time.
Seve was just too dam special to live in this reality, pure greatness God touched him that was so obvious.
A glorious rhythm, so smooth & he always looked like he had time to hit the ball.
The maestro at work, the most exciting player I’ve watched a magician on the course. Thanks for the memories gone but not forgotten.RIP Seve.
Great video..A historic moment in time.
David, thanks so much for this. For some time now, I have tried to watch video of Seve before I play, trying to capture that rhythm. This was a magical tape - it speaks to the beautiful swing and the striking. I met Seve in Madrid a few years ago, and I'm very happy I did. The one thing I wanted to tell him was how much pleasure he had given to so many people, and I think he appreciated that. With his health falling apart, and his marriage failing, and unshaven on the course playing the Madrid Open, there was still something very, very special about following him, as I did for several holes, inside the ropes. I even saw him subtly trying to intimidate an official into giving him a drop (which he didn't get). I first saw Seve live at Moyola Park in N Ireland (video available on CZcams) when he did all the putter tricks on the putting green before teeing off - he'd won The Masters that year, and although he shot around par that day, he was wonderful to watch in all departments of the game. I also saw him live at Oak Hill in the Ryder Cup, when he lost to Tom Lehman in the singles - BUT Lehman hit every green in regulation, and Seve was all over the place, and still took Lehman to the 15th. RIP Seve. Thanks again, David.
Yes it was amazing to be so close to a genius & watching him make it look SO easy! Glad you enjoyed it too!
Once in Gothenburg I was standing beside him on the range - and i never forget thet moment - and the sound when he hit the ball.
I followed Seve around Wentworth. He was a birdie machine, pure genius.
I saw him Captain the European team to victory in the Ryder Cup. He wanted to win so much, not being able to play in that Ryder cup was so difficult for him.
In his prime he is among the greatest if not the greatest to have ever played the game.
Although he came from a poor background he was a natural aristocrat. His sometimes erratic tendencies, along with his back problems, meant his haul of major championships was relatively slim in the end but that's not his legacy. He was the game's true cavalier and greatest artist. I watched this video all the way through and felt sad when it ended. Only a few really transcend their sport and Seve was one of them. And that swing was a thing of effortless beauty.There's no tension in it which is why you can watch him hit the ball over and over again. Majestic.
David: Thank you for bringing this video clip to the attention of Seve's many fans. It is a truly a masterclass of style
Thanks for the input, he certainly oozes pure class! I remember watching him during a practice round at the World Matchplay and a young boy said you didn't hit that seven very far, Seve said he was controlling the distance , then preceded to hit the same club another twenty yards longer! He could make the ball do anything!
Just mesmerising watching him play. Love Seve. RIP
I can watch this all day! what an effortless swing!
Such beauty. Poetry in flight.Agree with many that I can watch this for hours. Thanks for posting. 👍
Watched him play at Westchester CC during the old Buick classic. I believe in 1988 when he won. He walked out of the clubhouse to the range like a Greek God. A Spartan ready for battle. This man had an aura. Thanks for the video
just beautiful. bet he is having a a glass of rioja with payne stewart in heaven.god bless you sevvy
When Tiger said Seve was "virtually unbeatable at his best", he was referrering to when Seve swang the club like this. His short game always stood second to none. So this is as good as it gets in golf gents.
A swing best described as poetry in motion. RIP Seve!!
I never noticed before how the smoothness reminds me of Fred Couples too. Miss you Seve
Tiger definitely used SEVe as inspiration and his swing
Seve was a legend thanks for sharing this practice session I could watch it all day
He makes it look so easy. RIP to the master. Happened to watch the movie 'Seve' today. Good movie.
No trackman...nothing...just the sweet sound of the ball off the middle of a blade.
look at the divots - perfect lines; mine look like the lead into a pelican crossing....
惚れ惚れする練習光景ですね。
これほど綺麗なインパクトの音はそうは無い。
仕草全てが絵になるゴルファーでした。
Yes!
Gentleman, genius, and legend.
Simply a beautiful, effortless swing; his game never seemed to be the same , after he hooked that 4 iron into the pond on the last day of the '86 masters; just perfect ball striking.
Wow unbelievable touch!
I miss Seve. Best golfer ever. When was this? 1988? 1989?
1991.
No, it’s ‘86 or ‘87.
Beautiful and inspiring , I saw him play many times he was the governor .
I remember the big 5 as I was the same age ... I loved Seve's swing and tenacity. He is surely be missed.
Absolute poetry in motion!
The footwork is amazing. When he takes the club back, he looks like he is standing on a crate of eggs and doesn’t wAnt to break them. Amazing how he is connected to the ground.
Watched him sooo many times and followed him all around the uk. Just a legend))
Wow.Wow.Wow. My Hero in action.
Indeed! It was a pleasure to watch him practice!
I watched Seve hitting balls on the range at Wentworth - I've watched Greg Norman, Faldo, Els, Elkington and loads more from that era. Can honestly say his ball striking was the most memorable...he went out and shot 65 that day so was on form. Glad I got to experience it, every shot followed exactly the same trajectory, same shape. Was mesmerising ..
4:45 "Makes me want to clap" Great stuff thanks for sharing this, must have been amazing to watch in person
What a good video of one of the games greatest, he is so relaxed in his swing, we could all learn from this gem of a video
Fantastic. I used to go to the Matchplay every year. I even turned up in 1987, thinking the storm wouldn't have affected it!
Pure class keep coming back to this ‘
My hero....what a swing
Best European golfer ever .
The most impressive (everything else is impressive BTW!) thing I found with Seve, was his posture at address. Equipment wise 'Slazenger' were once a great golfing company.
Great footage of the Maestro thanks.
What grace & tempo!
Purest ball striking you'll ever see or hear.........with no effort what-so-ever. Just watch and learn from the best.
I am not native, but this lovely video has some lovely comments.
2:47 "The strike, you hear it?"
3:13 "Pure, pure".
3:40 (what did you say there?)
4:45 "Makes me wanna clap!"
5:36 "The noise it makes. He just makes a different noise to his guy".
6:36 "..... (what?) .... tomorrow morning".
Watching Seve hitting blades, when golf was more about art than technology. I think hearing the crowd roar when he hit it in the water at the 86 Masters was something he never got over. He knew they wanted Jack to win, broke his heart.
I played with Slazenger's Seve blades for about four years. High quality forged irons with no off-set. Nickel plated too, so that if the chrome wore thin, there was a vaguely brass-coloured tinge to the club face.
So relaxed and in control, the Master!
If anybody had more influence the Seve in the 80s and 90s I have yet to see them . Myself and a gang of hackers would get to our ball in a difficult position and the words were always the same "if Seve had this shot he would do xxxxxx" True legend and sadly missed in the UK God bless him and RIP Seve
Yer Seve head and shoulders the best, with fellow legends Norman, Langer, Faldo trailing in his wake.
Norman ruled the 90's and much of the late 80's, although I always loved Seve
Thank you for that David
Seve was pure quality, he just oozed class. What a swing, effortless ❤. Great guy.
Seve u we're a pleasure to watch!!RIP! LEGAND!!
Class, still one of my Golf heroes. Very much missed.
What a legend. Gone way too soon. RIP Seve
Those are some masterful divots
Poetry....fluid.....natural.....magical.....Seve
I once had the privilege to see him hit similar practice shots standing very close to him. Two things struck me: crisp contact shot after shot, and most importantly the absolute softness of his arms and hands.
Thank you for sharing!
I saw Seve at Torrey Pines when he was playing the tour back in the 80s. I got close enough to him that I made a point of walking in his footsteps for about ten paces.
I hear you as I idolized Seve and sometimes I imagine myself as him when I’m playing golf in hopes of some of his magic somehow influencing my swing. He was as close to perfect as a human being could be. Looks, intelligence, talent, presence, charisma, swing, humility, character, courage, short game.......and on and on. Had he more luck, like he needed any, he would have won 11 majors. ‘76 Open, ‘82 Masters, ‘85 Masters, ‘86 Masters, ‘87 Masters, ‘89 Masters. He almost won the US Open one year as well. Was he any good?
@@martysykes3221 and the most important thing, he was a good man. Born and raise throught the hard work and the respect. Un pedreñero más.
@@aha3885 yes, I admired him. Jack was "my guy" but it hurt to see him lose both the 1986 and 1987 Masters. He could have easily won one if not both of those. What a great player and competitor.
great looking swing fun to watch thanks for posting
This is absolute golf porn.
spot on ! !
this is era is when i met my heroes! RIP Seve
So good... what a legend
The 7 people who clicked the thumbs down should be banned from the internet for life.
Simon Plumb
***** You doesen´t need to know anything about Golf, to see that there is a genius playing there!
These People are stupid nothing more!
+Simon Plumb faldo?
It was Azinger.
Die InternetFahrschule I don't know anything about golf, but I can see this is poetry. My dad won a round with him in a raffle in the early 90s and I wanted to see him in action. God bless the internet :)
beautiful swing ever!♡
Absolute genius at work, so much rhythm & grace. He never forces the shot, it’s just poetry in motion, effortless power instead of powerless effort. What is incredible is that how did he lose this magic??
He started listening to golf 'gurus' like many more and got lost.
I went every year , a moment in time.
That sound! ball then turf. He was the best.
Most beautiful swing in golf!
Like Federer & Ali. Pure grace
A shame that Broadcasters prefer clips of the odd wilder swings at Lytham in 79, what I remember was the grace, rhythm and power
Incredible. One of the GOAT
Majestic!!
Super no need teacher so simple
Egis Petronis best swing ever see
“Makes me wanna clap” 😂🙌🏼👌🏼