Day 4
November 8
To say that the membership was excited about the semifinals was an
understatement. The stands were packed. There is a buzz and enthusiasm around
the club that we haven’t often witnessed surrounding an event - and not just
from the squash community. Interest came from all corners of the DAC. We don’t
focus enough on professional female athletes, and the fascination from all who
came to witness the squash turned quickly into awe, respect. We’ve been missing
out. But no more.
Olivia Blatchford Clyne (USA) v Donna Lobban (Australia)
This match started off with both players feeling each other out, a
comfortable pace, establishing their length, trying to gain some rhythm. Pretty
much exactly what many coaches recommend when starting off any contest: play
yourself in. Nothing fancy, just good, solid hitting.
Sharing the first 10 points, neither Olivia nor Donna looked ready to
take the next step. But the game did suddenly change. It didn’t appear that
Olivia altered any part of the current tactic either, but more that Donna
slightly lost her way. It was little of a nonchalant ending to the game, they
weren’t grinding rallies - not short mind you - but not… frenetic. 11-6 Olivia.
Donna Lobban and Olivia Blatchford Clyne |
Of course, that changed for the rest of the match. Both players were
now warmed up and ready to step it up. And we got the battle we were expecting.
The pace picked up, the ball was being placed into the front corners with more
venom, and the desperation was starting to increase. Donna’s technique is
virtually flawless, a beautiful swing, and she uses the lob so effectively, her
ability to lunge low into the front and lift the ball is a lesson in defense we
could all learn from. Olivia, however, wasn’t overly fazed. She wasn’t afraid
to volley from deep in the court, being very prepared to simply reset the
rallies with a counter length. She is also wickedly quick, literally zipping
around the court as if her shoes had a turbo boost. It was interesting squash
to say the least. The second game was tight and it could have gone either way,
but it was Olivia in the end that was able to finish the stronger of the two… 11-9.
The third game was almost a facsimile to the second. A classic
arm-wrestle, Donna extremely committed to extend the match to a fourth game,
Olivia just as determined not to. Up to this point, Donna had had a tougher run
- she had spent 45 minutes longer on court this week. Was this a factor? I have
no idea, but Olivia did look a little sprightlier out there as the third game
was coming to an end. At 10-6 it looked all but over. Four match-points. But
Donna wasn’t rolling over so easily for her, she fought back with new spirit
and saved the first 3. It was 9-10, the crowd eager to see more… but it wasn’t
to be. Fourth time a charm for Olivia, she took it 11-9.
Nele Gilis (BEL) v Nadine Shanin (Egypt)
Another mouthwatering contest for the membership. World number 21 v
world number 18. These 2 have never played each other on the tour before so
both were entering the court as ‘strangers’. For me the most telling factor
would actually be what both had done this week leading up to the semifinal.
Nadine had to come back from 2-1 down in her first match to win in 5 and also
had a tough 4-setter in the quarter final just the day before. Nele for her
part, had a scare in her first match and escaped 3-1 in a long 4 setter, but
had a lot easier run in her quarter final meaning she was probably the fresher
of the two, not just physically, but mentally as well.
Nele is a machine. And I mean that as a high compliment. Is it possible
to get her heart rate up? No matter how stressful the rally, she not once
appeared like she was under duress. A model of consistency. Nadine, though, has
that Egyptian flair that has become a trait with many of their players. The
ability to create a lot of power - but not lose the velvet touch, and the skill
to pull a winner out of thin air - hit a nick from improbable angles.
But Nadine struggled to find her feet. What she did find was the tin
way too often as she forcing the front court too soon. And you can’t give a top
20 player freebies and expect a lot of success. Nele was ruthless in her
approach and wasn’t letting up. Keep the rally going, patience, patience. The
first 2 games were not much in doubt: Nele won 11-7, 11-3.
The third started off in the same vein, with Nele racing off to a 5-2
lead and it looked like this would be over quickly. But Nadine wasn’t on the
same wavelength. Maybe she felt more relaxed at this point, but a couple of
slick winners, helped by a couple of (rare) unforced errors from Nele, and
Nadine suddenly had new hope and a sniff of a comeback. She rode the momentum
she suddenly owned and just like that, she had snagged the third 11-6. The
crowd was loving it.
Unfortunately, that was all that Nadine had left. Nele scooted off to a
7-0 lead before Nadine could bother the scorekeeper and the lass from Belgium
was not going to let her opponent re-live another comeback. No mercy, Nele
cleaned up the fourth 11-2.
We were in for a dream final. Number 1 seed v the number 2
seed. World number 18 v the world number 19…