That's how cancer-stricken Ballesteros says his life was, nine months ago
That's how cancer-stricken Ballesteros says his life was, nine months ago
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Seve Ballesteros made his first official public appearance yesterday since undergoing life-saving surgery to remove a brain tumour last December.
The five-time major winner was diagnosed with a brain tumour after losing consciousness at Madrid Airport last October.
He spent the next 66 days in Madrid's La Paz hospital where he underwent four operations before returning home in Bilbao on December 9. Ballesteros has been undergoing chemotherapy since and yesterday got the chance to praise the doctors who performed the operationsu00a0 on him describing their work as "a miracle." He also likened his fight against cancer to the birdie putt he sank on the 18th at St Andrews to win the 1984 Open, which he believes required a similar amount of will power. He added to BBC Sport: "My recovery is like The Open in 1984 when the ball hovered on the lip of the hole. With all my energy I willed it to drop in and it did. With that ability and the doctors' hands, I am here now."
