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Great Europeans are behind England`s golden run, says Casey

English golf is enjoying a spell of rare global prominence with three players in the top-10 rankings and number six Paul Casey believes the credit lies with a great generation of Europeans led by Seve Ballesteros.

London: English golf is enjoying a spell of rare global prominence with three players in the top-10 rankings and number six Paul Casey believes the credit lies with a great generation of Europeans led by Seve Ballesteros.
Ten years ago there were just two Englishmen in the top 100 but with Casey now just below fourth-ranked Lee Westwood and fifth-placed Ian Poulter, the transformation has been impressive. "My take on it is, it`s the result of the great European golf that I was watching when I was a kid back in the 80s and early 90s," Casey told reporters on Tuesday ahead of this week`s WGC-CA Championship at Doral."Nick Faldo, Seve, Ian Woosnam, Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle, Monty (Colin Montgomerie) ... (Jose Maria) Olazabal was quite young but he was sort of part of that movement too. Those Europeans got me interested in the game.” "That was when I loved to watch and I got to see them live. I think if you asked these other Englishmen, Brits and Europeans who have now risen among us in the world rankings that was the reason they got hooked," said Casey."It`s just taken 20 years or so for us to hone our skills." For the 32-year-old Casey it was five-times major winner Ballesteros who made the biggest impression. Bureau Report