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TODAY in
Sheffield ... 2013 Daily Reports
Steve in Sheffield |
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Five
BJO titles for Egypt in Sheffield as Emily
does it again for the hosts ...
We started with
550 competitors in the Tecnifibre British
Junior Open, hosted in Sheffield for the
18th consecutive year, but today we were
down to 16.
Eight finals on the Abbeydale glass court,
starting at 10.00, and although traditional
junior powerhouse Egypt took five of the
titles, there were popular winners from
England, Malaysia, and - most unexpectedly
but warmly applauded by all - Peru.
G13 [1]
Hania El Hammany (Egy) 3-0 [2] Rowan
Reda (Egy)
11/8, 11/5, 11/3 (19m)
B13 [2] Mohamed El Shamy (Egy) 3-2
[1] Marwan Tarek (Egy)
12/14, 11/4, 7/11, 11/9, 13/11 (57m)
G15 [1] Habiba Mohamed (Egy) 3-0
[3/4] Siva Sangari (Mas)
11/8, 11/6, 14/12 (25m)
B15 [1] Eain Yow Ng (Mas) 3-0
[2] Mohammad Alsarraj (Jor)
11/1, 11/6, 11/7 (24m)
G17 [1] Yathreb Adel (Egy) 3-1
[2] Salma Hani (Egy)
11/8, 11/9, 6/11, 12/10 (61m)
B17 [5/8] Diego Elias (Per) 3-2
[2] Marwan El Gawarhy (Egy)
3/11, 12/10, 7/11, 11/5, 11/9 (63m)
G19 [1] Emily Whitlock (Eng)
3-1 [3/4] Nouran Gohar (Egy)
11/8, 9/11, 11/4, 11/7 (49m)
B19 [2] Fares Desouky (Egy) 3-2
[1] Mazen Hesham (Egy)
12/14, 11/5, 11/8, 6/11, 11/6 (82m) |
PHOTO GALLERIES
TWITTER UPDATES
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G13 [1]
Hania El Hammany (Egy) 3-0
[2] Rowan Reda (Egy)
11/8, 11/5, 11/3 (19m)
Top seed Hania takes number one
No surprises in the first final, as top seed
Hania El Hammany used her superior physique
to good effect, taking charge of the match
after a close first game to claim her first
BJO title, and Egypt's first of the day.
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these
photos and more in the gallery |
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B13 [2]
Mohamed El Shamy (Egy) 3-2
[1] Marwan Tarek (Egy)
12/14, 11/4, 7/11, 11/9, 13/11
(57m)
El Shamy won't be
beaten
You can have all the skills in the world,
and top seed Marwan Tarek has those, but
sometimes you just have to bow to an
irresistible will.
Second seed Mohamed El Shamy, tiny in
comparison to his opponent, came from 0-2
down to win his semi-final, and came from
4-8 down in the fifth today to claim the
Boys' U13 title.
He's irrepressible, running, sliding,
diving, jumping, and hitting great shots
too, and today he just had a little bit more
will to win than Marwan.
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G15 [1]
Habiba Mohamed (Egy) 3-0
[3/4] Siva Sangari (Mas)
11/8, 11/6, 14/12 (25m)
Three in a row for Habiba
While
we're on the subject of irresistible wills,
Habiba Mohamed, two-time U13 champion, has
that in abundance and she has the physique
to go with it too.
Her drive, power, and not a little skill too
has proven too much for most opponents to
cope with, and although Siva put up a good
fight today, in the end Habiba's willpower
won through.
Starts of 7-3 in the first and 7-1 in the
secind were enough, but Habiba had to fight
hard in a close third, saving a game ball at
9-10.
It ended with a series of 2 or 3 shot
rallies, Siva hitting some nice return
winners, Habiba thundering down some of her
own, and on her third match ball Siva
couldn't get out of the way and on a stroke
Habiba had her hat trick. |
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B15 [1]
Eain Yow Ng (Mas) 3-0
[2] Mohammad Alsarraj (Jor)
11/1, 11/6, 11/7 (24m)
Ng doubles up
Malaysia
did claim a title in the next match as top
seed Eain Yow Ng added the U15 title to the
B13 crown he won two years ago.
Ng beat his opponent on that day in
yesterday's semi-final, which much have
given him a boost coming into today's final
against Jordan's Mohammas Alsarraj.
The
Malaysian certainly started well, taking the
first game at a canter, and he kept that
momentum up, leading throughout the second
and third games despite Alsarraj's
considerable efforts to close the gaps.
That's Malaysia back on the BJO winning
track, and a very creditable first finalist
for Jordan. |
G17 [1]
Yathreb Adel (Egy) 3-1 [2] Salma Hani (Egy)
11/8, 11/9, 6/11, 12/10 (61m)
It's Yathreb again
Playing in her fifth consecutive final
Yathreb Adel made it four BJO titles as she
beat fellow Egyptian Salma Hani in a repeat
of last year's G17 final (they also met in
the G15 final of three years ago, Yathreb
won that one too).
It
wasn't the most fluid of matches as two
players who know each other's games well
tried to occupy the same space for a lot of
the time, but it was Yathreb who generally
held sway, leading through most of the first
and closing out a tight second with hardly a
point between them.
Salma had been running into the back of
Yathreb at regular intervals, and at 1-all
in the third she steamed in again, flooring
her opponent who needed a few minutes'
recovery time. Salma got a conduct
stroke awarded against her for that.
The match was a little more flowing
thereafter, and just as tight with, again,
hardly anything to split them. Yathreb got a
match ball at 10-9, but needed a second to
take the match 12-10 and collect her fourth
title.
"I'm so pleased to win another (her fourth)
BJO title," said Yathreb, "and so grateful
to Ian Thomas and Jonah Barrington at
Millfield who have given me so much suport." |
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B17
[5/8] Diego Elias (Per) 3-2
[2] Marwan
El Gawarhy (Egy)
3/11, 12/10, 7/11, 11/5, 11/9 (63m)
Diego does it again
You have to take your hat off to Peru's
Diego Elias - in his last three matches he's
beaten three Egyptians, seeded #1, #5/8, and
today in the final the #2 seed. And all of
those matches were five-setters, where does
he get his energy from !
He
hardly got started in the first, and at 10/5
down in the second it wasn't looking good
for Diego, but seven points in a row -
including a conduct stroke for time wasting
at 9-10 - and we had a match on our hands.
The crowd - apart from the large and
noisy-as-ever Egyptian contingent - were
getting behind Diego now, and he responded
as the next two games were shared, with some
tremendous squash being played by both of
them. Diego seems to get stronger as the
rallies go on, and the crowd were picking up
his momentum each time.
There was nothing in it in the fifth, Diego
had the lead more often than not, but never
by much.
He got to 10-8, thought he's won it only for
the referee to award a let which was npisily
booed, but he did win it when, at the end of
what was probably the rally of the
tournament, Gawarhy tinned ad the Peruvian
celebrations could begin. |
G19
[1] Emily Whitlock (Eng) 3-1
[3/4] Nouran Gohar (Egy) 11/8, 9/11,
11/4, 11/7 (49m)
Emily takes another
title
You wait a decade for a BJO title - if
you're British, anyway - and then two come
along in three years.
Both of those belong to Emily Whitlock as
she justified her top billing with a
typically calm and solid performance to beat
Nouran Gohar, last year's U15 champion, in
four games.
Gohar started well, but Whitlock whittled
down a 4-7 deficit to take the lead 11-8.
The
Egyptian again led the way in the second,
and although Emily again pulled back, from
9-all Nouran forced two errors to level the
match 11-9.
Emily was on top for the next two games
though, taking the third quickly 11-4, and a
6-2 lead in the fourth was enough for her to
hold off the Egyptian, who hit the tin three
times in the last five rallies as Emily
rounded off her junior career in style.
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B19
[2] Fares Desouky (Egy) 3-2
[1] Mazen Hesham (Egy)
12/14, 11/5, 11/8, 6/11, 11/6 (82m)
First time Fares
You
just knew the last match of a long week
would be a five-setter, didn't you! Two
determined, talented Egyptians, the top two
seeds, it was never going to be anything
than a tough, high quality match and it
didn't disappoint.
Playing in his first BJO final, Fares
Desouky came through to keep the
prestigious Drysdale Cup in deserving
Egyptian hands.
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