Day 1
November 5
The first ever Women’s Pro Squash event in Detroit. It was
crunch time. The players had been arriving and practicing the past couple of
days. Any members that caught a glimpse of their hitting immediately stopped in
their tracks, had to take a little time to process the easy power they
generated, the non-stop accuracy, the speed, the skill. All factors of the game
that that all club members wished they possessed. And this was just the routine
squash. They couldn’t wait until it got real.
In what we hope to be an annual staple event on the women’s
tour, we kicked off the inaugural tournament with an epic match….
Diana Garcia
(Mexico) v Emilia Soini (Finland)
A massive battle. A colossal first game. Almost two games in
one really. Diana (world ranking #70) and Emilia (#57) could not finish the
first game to help themselves. Much to the crowd’s delight however – the longer
it took, the more entertaining of course. If every game were to be like this
one, the match would have taken 2 hours. Quality squash from both ladies,
neither clearly giving an inch, Diana actually had the most chances to take the
game earning 5 (or was it 6..?) game balls but unable to convert that last
rally. Emilia hung tough and took the game 19-17.
Strangely, that small victory did not carry over into the
second game for the Finn. She came out a little flat as opposed to Diana who appeared
even more determined and the Mexican took control for an 11-5 win and evening
it up at 1 game apiece.
The third was another tight encounter. The crowd was being
treated to some true arm-wrestling squash, and it was point-for point all the
way to the tie-break. This time however, Diana was not going let another close
game slip away and she closed it out 13-11. She could smell the finish line.
Emilia however, was not done. She was going to make Diana earn
every rally, and even though the pressure was on, she kept up the pace and
would not let her opponent create any sort of lead. For a third time in the
match, the game was decided by 2 points – this time 11-9 – and it was Emilia
snatching the win this time, stretching the match into a 5th.
The wind appeared to leave Diana’s sails. She was 2 rallies
away from victory in the 4th – only to be denied – and that looked
to play a mental part for the decider. Emilia stayed rock solid, could sense
her opponent wavering and did not let Diana off the hook. She took the 5th
11-4.
It was a tremendous match to open the tournament with!
Alison Thomson
(Scotland) v Salma Youssef (Egypt)
In arguably the match of the day – (and yes, it would be
tough to one-up the Garcia-Soini match!), Alison (#78) and Salma (#64) kept
everyone on the edge of their seats. As luck of the draw would have it, these
two played each other just 4 days prior in Ottawa. Alison pulled that one out
in 5 tough games, so there was a good chance we were about to watch another grueling
combat. We were right.
Salma was the first to assert herself in the first game, she
made fairly quick work of anything loose and was certainly ready to make amends
of her recent loss. For Alison’s part, she appeared to have some trouble
getting herself into the rhythm of the match, struggling with her line and
length. 11-5 to the Egyptian.
The second game turned. Alison was in no mood to repeat the
first and started to pick up the strong hitting, immediately creating that
pressure. That pressure threw Salma off for a bit and the game was quickly out
of reach for her. 11-5 to the Scotswoman.
The third game was anybody’s to take. The rallies turned
more intense, longer, stressful. Which, naturally, makes it more thrilling for
the audience. The referee was called upon a few more times as well as the fervor
crept up, desperation squash can bring out the ‘let’ calls all the more
frequently. Extending into the tie break, all it took was one unforced error plus
a slightly loose shot from Salma, opening ever so slightly the opportunity for
Alison to take advantage and squeak out the 13-11 victory, and a 2-1 lead.
But the 4th game was all the Egyptian. Alison
lost her way somewhat and Salma wasn’t going to let her find her way back
either. It was a comfortable 11-4, setting up the pair’s second 5-setter in a
week.
And what a classic of a 5th it was. Salma took an
early – albeit small – lead and kept her nose in front by a couple of points
all the way to 10-8, earning 2 match balls. And she didn’t play poor rallies,
but Alison was putting it all on the line, displaying some overly impressive
stretching and lunging, retrieving balls that looked all but out of reach,
hanging in by the skin of her teeth. In almost miraculous fashion, Alison evened
it up to 10-all. Salma kept moving the ball around effectively, Alison
continuing to keep the ball in play with outstanding defensive shots just long
enough. Both girls deserved the win here, but in the end it was Alison moving
onto the second round with a 14-12 in the 5th triumph!
We had six other matches for day one, three of them were
3-0; the other three 3-1. An exceptional level of squash on display all
evening, the crowd were simply astonished with their athleticism. I can’t brag
about all the matches, but I’ll mention just a couple brief highlights…
Nikki Todd
(Canada) #69 is actually a DAC fan favorite here as she has graced us with her
delightful presence before and won everyone’s heart over. When she smiles –and she
is always smiling – we know the sun
is shining and all is right with the world. When my assistant pro is smiling,
however, I immediately have to wonder… what
has he done now??!! Nikki got through a tough opponent in Catalina Pelaez (Colombia) #71 in 4
games, the first three of which were rather tight!
Intea Mackevica (Latvia)
#59 looked very strong against Hana
Moataz (Egypt) #101. After dropping the first game, Ineta stepped it up
with very strong hitting to take the next 3. She moves smoothly, long reach, and
balanced. She has to tackle Nele Gilis
(Belgium) #18 in the second round today. A tough ask to be sure, but it could be
interesting to see how much pressure she could apply.
All full round 1results:
Emilia Soini
(Finland) beat Diana Garcia (Mexico)
19-17, 5-11, 11-13, 11-9, 11-4
Intea Mackevica (Latvia)
beat Hana Moataz (Egypt) 7-11, 11-2,
11-2, 11-4
Nikki Todd
(Canada) beat Catalina Pelaez
(Colombia) 11-6, 7-11, 11-9, 11-3
Alison Thomson
(Scotland) beat Salma Youssef
(Egypt) 5-11, 11-5, 13-11, 4-11, 14-12
Anna Serme (Czech
Republic) beat Cristina Gomez (Spain)
11-8, 11-7, 11-9
Donna Lobban
(Australia) beat Nicole Bunyan
(Canada) 11-7, 11-5, 11-3
Sabrina Sobhy
(USA) beat Karina Tyma (Poland)
11-4; 11-2, 11-5
Rachael Chadwick
(England) beat Tessa ter Sluis
(Netherlands) 7-11, 11-4, 11-7, 11-7