Women's Final:
[1] Madeline Perry (Irl) bt
[2] Laura Lengthorn (Eng)
10/8">
DAY FOUR - Finals
Steve Cubbins reports from Edinburgh |
|
Women's Final:
[1] Madeline Perry (Irl) bt
[2] Laura Lengthorn (Eng)
10/8, 9/3, 9/2 (34m)
Men's Final:
[1] Azlan Iskandar (Mas) bt
[2] Alex Gough (Wal)
4/11, 11/5, 9/11, 11/8, 11/4 (69m)
|
|
AZLAN
TOUGHS IT OUT
Men's Final
[1] Azlan Iskandar (Mas) bt
[2] Alex Gough
(Wal) 4/11,
11/5, 9/11, 11/8, 11/4 (69m) |
Three five-game matches in two days and
Azlan Iskandar was still going strong in the fifth.
It
wasn't a good start for the Malaysian number one, as Alex Gough
raced to a 5/1 lead in the first. This was quick, no feeling each other out
here, but slowly the rallies became longer, and although Azlan pulled a few
points back, the game was gone.
The roles were reversed in the second, Alex
trying to force the pace and making early errors to go 5/1 down. Again the
rallies became longer, more cagey, but the lead was enough for Azlan to
level, Alex giving the last two points away.
After an error-prone start to the third - from both - the pattern resumed,
long rallies looking for the opening, and it was even up to 8-all. Then
Azlan served out, and two more errors virtually gifted the lead to Alex.
A great start to the fourth saw Azlan again lead 5/1, but more mistakes let
the Welshman back in. 5-all, 7-all, then a huge rally with both players
visiting all corners of the court ... a let. Then another lung-busting
rally, both of them playing safe until Alex gave away the stroke. And this
time Azlan stayed strong at the end, levelling the match three crosscourts
that were just too tight.
And that was it really. Azlan, having already broken four sets of strings
this weekend - Simon managed to restring two overnight - started the fifth
with a new racket after discovering another break, but continued where he
left off.
A quick early lead was never threatened as the Welshman showed signs of
exhaustion, and Azlan had survived a third successive marathon to become Artemis
Edinburgh Open champion.
|
"I'm
really pleased with that. It's been a hard weekend, with three long
matches in two days, but I felt confident at the start, and stayed
confident all the way through.
"Alex started of really well, but I managed to pull it back, and I think
he tired a bit in the end."
|
"I
was very accurate in the first, stepping into the ball well and
everything was biting.
"He came back well, and although he made a few errors at the end of the
third he was much tighter at the end of the fourth.
"I needed that fourth game really, I felt ok in the lungs, but I started
to feel it and the body was creaking a bit towards the end."
|
|
Perry
In Command
[1] Madeline Perry (Irl) bt [2]
Laura
Lengthorn (Eng) 10/8, 9/3, 9/2 (34m) |
Ireland's Madeline Perry, world
number 11, added her name to the Artemis Open hall of Fame with a confident
performance against Laura Lengthorn, the English world number 15.
Attacking from the outset, Madeline quickly moved into a 6-0 lead in the
opening game, controlling the 'T' and driving Laura to the corners. Once she
got her first point the English girl seemed to find the pace of the game,
and for a while she was in command, forcing errors from the Irish racket and
coming back to reach game ball at 8/7. But Perry regrouped, levelled on a
stroke then won a huge rally to retake the lead and clinched the game with a
clinical volley drop.
Back in the groove, Madeline raced to 7-0 in the second in a single hand. It
wasn't that Laura was making mistakes - both girls were driving the ball
hard and the rallies were well-contested - but Madeline was always there for
the winning opportunity, reaching 8-0 for the loss of two serves. A brief
comeback was halted with a dying drive to the backhand, and two games were
in the bag.
The third followed the same pattern, Madeline always ahead, on the court and
in the score. Laura pegged two points back from a 5-0 deficit, but that was
only a pause in the flow of points as Perry closed out the match, finishing
with an easy drop with Lengthorn stranded at the back.
|
"Happy
with that.
"I was taking the ball really early and putting it away well.
"My length went a bit funny at the end of the first game and I lost a
bit of concentration, but I got it back.
"I felt really relaxed all the way through, and was hitting the ball
really well.
"We've all had a great time in Edinburgh, it's been really well
organised and we're looking forward to coming back next year."
|
|
DAY THREE - QUARTERS AND SEMIS |
Semi-Finals:
[1] Madeline Perry (Irl) bt [3/4] Georgina Stoker (Eng)
9/6, 9/3, 9/3 (27m)
[2] Laura Lengthorn (Eng) bt [5/8] Laura Mylotte (Irl)
9/4, 9/5, 9/10, 9/3 (43m)
[1] Azlan Iskandar (Mas) bt [3/4] Simon Parke (Eng)
7/11, 11/6, 7/11, 11/8, 11/9 (71m)
[2] Alex Gough (Wal) bt [3/4] Joey Barrington (Eng)
12/10, 11/7, 11/9 (52m)
|
|
Top Seeds Into
Artemis Finals
It wasn't all plain sailing, but the finals of the Artemis Edinburgh Open
will be contested by the top seeds tomorrow after completion of the quarter
and semi-finals today.
Women's Semis
[1] Madeline Perry (Irl) bt [3/4] Georgina Stoker (Eng)
9/6, 9/3, 9/3 (27m) |
First
match on was top seed Madeline Perry against Georgina Stoker.
Georgina held her own at the start of the match, leading 6-5 in the first,
but Ireland's world number eleven was never seriously troubled thereafter as
she moved into her first Edinburgh final.
[2] Laura Lengthorn (Eng) bt [5/8] Laura Mylotte (Irl)
9/4, 9/5, 9/10, 9/3 (43m) |
Second seed Laura Lengthorn took on surprise package Laura Mylotte,
and while an all-Irish final was always unlikely, the Irish Champion, who
speculated the she would 'get a lesson' put up a very competitive
performance.
Lengthorn took the first, and eased away from 5-all in the second with
Mylotte looking a little nervous. But Mylotte competed on equal terms for
most of the third, getting the better of the rallies, driving Lengthorn to
the back and taking a 7/2 lead.
As Lengthorn stepped up the pace errors crept in and it was quickly level,
but Mylotte hung on, finally taking the game 10/9 on a crisp forehand
winner.
An early Irish lead in the fourth quickly evaporated as the world number
fifteen regained control to reach her allotted place in the final.
|
"Georgina
was hitting the ball well and staying in the rallies. It was quite
warm, so I tried to keep to a length and catch her out by holding
the ball ... basic squash really."
Madeline Perry
"I got drawn into hitting the ball with her, and I was never going
to win that. I wanted to mix it up more, but I just couldn't do
it.
"I got to where I was supposed to, so it wasn't a bad weekend
all told."
Georgina Stoker |
"She
played really well, I was impressed. When I put the pressure on,
really put it to a length you could tell the difference in the
rankings, but if she were to go full-time she could do very well."
Laura Lengthorn
"I
was pleased with that, but as soon as I got a game I though
'that's it, I've done it', and it was hard to get back into it in
the fourth.
"I'm trying to play as many tournaments as I can to get a ranking,
but it's difficult, I work full time and you need a ranking to get
into the tournaments."
Laura Mylotte |
|
Goughy makes the
final
[2] Alex Gough (Wal) bt [3/4]
Joey Barrington (Eng)
12/10, 11/7, 11/9 (52m) |
Alex
Gough, a semi-finalist here last year, reached his first Artemis Open
final with a straight-games win over Joey Barrington. Alex was never
headed, but Joey was always within reach, and try as he might he couldn't
close the gap.
Azlan out-Parky's Parky
[1] Azlan Iskandar (Mas) bt [3/4] Simon Parke (Eng)
7/11, 11/6, 7/11, 11/8, 11/9 (71m) |
The final match of the evening was the longest - isn't it always - and
provided the ESC crowd with
a real treat.
Top seed Azlan Iskandar took on the retrieving machine that is
Simon Parke and matched him shot for shot, and eventually beat him at
his own game.
To cut a long story short, the first four games were shared and we entered a
decider that was more like chess than squash. More like 20 games of chess in
fact, with each rally beautifully crafted, both players retrieving as if
their lives depended on it, trying to take chances when they came only to
find the ball coming back again ... and again ... and again.
And each rally was the same. There were no short ones, both players using
all their shots in each rally until one or the other found a winner or a
tin.
It was gripping stuff, and it inevitably went up through the scores, 1-all
through to 9-all with no sign of daylight. The inevitable tie-breaker never
happened, as Parke was denied an obvious stroke at 9-10 - a rally he'd
worked his socks off for, but he continued with merely a glance at the
gallery - and Azlan went on to claim the win to a standing ovation from an
appreciative Edinburgh crowd.
Marvellous squash, and if we get a final half as good we'll have been lucky. |
"I
played myself into a bit of form there. I seemed to be able to
cover everything he did so I felt quite comfortable, and Although
the games were close, I was never behind.
"I stepped back a little, which gave me more time and allowed me
to step into the shots a bit more, and put more onto it. I was
doing that better than I have for a few months."
Alex Gough
"He just played too well tonight. He
moves well, gets back a lot of balls you don't expect. I wanted to
do better, but I guess it's all part of the process ..."
Joey Barrington |
"It
wasn't a high-paced match, Simon tried to absorb me and draw me
in, knowing I had a hard game this afternoon. But I like this
court, is suits my game and it's got good height to get me out of
trouble.
"I cramped up a little in the middle of the fifth, so had to play
conservatively, but fortunately came through.
"It was a thinking game tonight, that's for sure."
Azlan Iskandar
"The
court's so quick you have to play like that. Old style squash
really, keeping it going, probing for an opening, a little flick
or a crosscourt to change the pace.
"That's the slowest I've played in a long time, but sometimes
that's what you have to do."
Simon Parke |
|
|
Sat 28th
jan : Women's Quarter-finals:
[1]
Madeline Perry
bt
Leonie Holt
9/0, 9/0, 10/8 (27m)
[3/4] Georgina
Stoker
bt
Sarah Bowles
5/9, 9/3, 9/4, 9/2 (46m)
[5/8] Laura Mylotte bt [3/4] S. Kippax
9/7, 9/2, 10/9 (33m)
[2] Laura Lengthorn bt Jenny Wright
9/4, 9/3, 9/1 |
Men's Quarter-finals:
[1] Azlan Iskandar bt [5/8] Alex
Stait
12/14, 11/9, 11/7, 11/13, 11/8 (66m)
[3/4]
Simon Parke
bt Daryl Selby
8/11, 11/3, 11/3, 11/6
[3/4]
Joey Barrington
bt Chris Simpson
11/5, 18/16, 8/11, 11/5 (73m)
[2] Alex Gough
bt Andy Whipp
11/6, 6/11, 11/8, 11/6 |
|
FULL DRAWS
&
RESULTS
Men's Quarters
No upsets in the men's quarters, but all of the top four seeds will
have wanted to win in straight games if possible, to conserve energy
for tonight's semi-finals, and none of them managed it.
|
[2] Alex Gough
bt Andy Whipp
11/6, 6/11, 11/8, 11/6 |
First up was Alex Gough against the in-form Andy Whipp on the
showcourt. Alex took the first, but from mid-way through the second Andy
took a run of points to level.
Andy's form continued in the third as he moved into a 7/3 advantage, but a
series of costly errors brought Alex into the lead at 8/7. "That's awful,"
exclaimed Andy after one tin. "Now that really was awful," quipped Alex
after Andy hit an even worse one the next point. Still fretting over those,
another two gave the game to Alex 11/8.
Alex led 7/4 in the fourth when he was caught on the bridge of the nose by
Andy's racket. A quick break to the changing rooms for running repairs -
although it was a pretty big bump - and Alex was back. Andy wasn't though,
and his concentration broken he subsided quickly.
So it's a semi tonight for Alex, and probably a sore nose for a while ...
|
"That
was rubbish, so annoying.
"I just threw away the third after
controlling it all the way through, and when he came back on in
the fourth I was all over the place."
Andy Whipp |
"I
think he felt a bit guilty in the end!
"I felt comfortable up until
then, but I'm still struggling to find out how to play on these
courts. I've tried about eight styles so far, but I still can't
put the ball away properly, especially with the 19" tins, the ball
just keeps coming back.
"That's the best Andy's played against me though, he's stepped up
a notch, plays at a really fast pace but still makes a few too
many errors. But then, if you play at that pace, trying to force
it, that's going to happen."
Alex Gough |
|
[1] Azlan Iskandar bt [5/8] Alex
Stait
12/14, 11/9, 11/7, 11/13,
11/8 (66m) |
Top seed Azlan Iskandar survived a scare as he
needed the full five games to get past Alex Stait. Can't say I saw any of it
- court one was packed in hope of seeing an upset, but although Azlan was
far from pleased with his performance, Alex was just as disappointed at
letting the chance slip through his fingers.
"I
don't know how I lost that.
"I was well up in the fourth and fifth, I really should have won."
Alex Stait |
|
"That
was tough. I find it hard to cope with this court, it's so
different from the showcourt.
"I was up in the two games I lost, so I was annoyed at that. Not
to take anything away from Alex though, he played really well.
"Still a win's a win."
Azlan Iskandar |
|
[3/4]
Simon Parke
bt Daryl Selby
8/11, 11/3, 11/3, 11/6
[3/4]
Joey Barrington
bt Chris Simpson
11/5, 18/16, 8/11, 11/5 (73m) |
3/4 seeds Joey Barrington and Simon Parke reached their
expected semi-finals, but were tested by a pair of rising England stars.
Daryl Selby and Chris Simpson both paid the price for
yesterday's exploits, but both acquitted themselves well. Daryl faded after
taking the first game from Simon Parke, and Chris was facing an uphill
struggle after losing the second 18/16 to give Joey a 2-0 lead. |
"I
was a bit tired from yesterday, and you can do without someone who
gets the ball back as much as Simon does when you're feeling like
that.
"I was happy with how I played at the start, got tired but came
back into it in the fourth, but I didn't make him work hard enough
and a few decisions and a few tins gave it to him really. "
Daryl Selby |
|
"It's a hard court to play on (court
1), hard to put the ball away, plus I've not played on a 19" tin for
about a year, which takes away your margin for error.
"But Chris played very well, I had to work hard for it. It was a long
tie-break in the second, but the longest one I've been involved with was
a 22-24 loss to Goughy ... who I'm playing next."
Joey Barrington |
|
"All in all a good weekend. I played well, which is all you can ask for
really, just a bit tired today.
I've started training with David Pearson in Harrogate, and I'm hoping to
start an Open University course which should allow me to keep up with my
squash and my studies."
Chris Simpson |
|
Women's Quarters
Ireland's
top seed Madeline Perry looked to be cruising to victory when she
took the first two games against Leonie Holt in four and five minutes
for the loss of five serves and no points.
But Leoni found something extra in the third, started to make Madeline work
much harder, and started to get the better of some hard rallies.
A good start to lead 5/2 became 8/4 with some determined play, and the top
seed looked like she was dropping her first game of the tournament. A couple
of errors from Leoni let Madeline back in, and she went on from there to
claim the game, although Leoni was fighting to the end, forcing several
handouts at match-ball down in the 15-minute third.
Georgina Stoker earned her seeded place
in the semi-finals, recovering from a game down to Sarah Bowles.
Georgina looked out of sorts early on, but Sarah's error count grew parallel
to Georgina's increased composure, and the final two games were fairly
comfortable win for the 3/4 seed.
"It's
the first time Sarah and I have played in years, but we used to play all
the time.
"I'm a bit tired, I just gor back from the US yesterday, so I didn't
feel too refreshed in the first, but once I started getting my length I
was OK."
Georgina Stoker
"Too many mistakes and I just ran out of steam."
Sarah Bowles |
|
"In
the first two games I tried to play to a length, but if you do
that she gets right on top of you. So in the third I knew I had to
mix it up a bit, make her move around instead of me.
"These matches are good preparation for the Nationals. I felt in
control of my matches yesterday, whereas today I wasn't in control at
all ... but I'm sure it will have done me good."
Leoni Holt
"She
played well in the third, going for her shots and took me by
surprise. When I was 8/5 down I wasn't looking forward to another
game, with the semi-final later on, so I was pleased to take that
third."
Madeline Perry |
|
Second seed Laura Lengthorn also
maintained her unblemished record, ending the run of Jenny Wright.
The upset came when Irish National Champion Laura Mylotte beat
England's 3/4 seed Sarah Kippax in straight games.
"That's
definitely my best win yet. I felt in control for most of it, her
strength is her backhand so I tried to keep it off that.
"These games are good for me. I beat Aisling in the nationals, and she's
world ranked, and now this, it's a great win and should do me the power
of good.
"I don't really expect to do anything against Laura [Lengthorn] in the
semi, she'll probably teach me a lesson, so let's just see how it goes."
Laura Mylotte |
|
"That wasn't too bad, longer than yesterday but I felt pretty much
in control.
"Jenny is good if you give her time, so in the third I tried to
step up the pace, keep it straight and make her do the work and it
paid off."
Laura Lengthorn |
|
Fri 27th:
Day TWO ...
Friday is always the busiest day at BSPA events, with two rounds in each of
the draws, so we can only give you a taster of some of the matches. For full
results, check the draws
ROUND TWO
The evening session saw both draws whittled down to the last eight, with the
men's and women's top four seeds safely through, and 5/8-seeded
casualties in each.
In the women's event Sarah Bowles and Jenny Wright scored
upset victories over Deon Saffery and Fiona Moverley, while in the men's
youngsters Chris Simpson and Daryl Selby both triumphed over
experienced seeded opponents.
Simpson saw off Peter Genever in three and Selby rounding off the evening
with an 81-minute marathon five-setter against Stephen Meads. Andy Whipp
made it three 5/8 seeds missing from the men's draw with a 3/0 win over Ben
Garner. |
|
A fine Finish
Daryl Selby bt Stephen Meads
11/9, 4/11, 4/11, 11/3, 11/9 (81m) |
After a first rally the "went on forever"
according to one spectator, the second round match between Steve Meads
and Daryl Selby went on to become an enthralling contest, the longest
match of the tournament so far (of course, it just had to be the last match
of the day, didn't it ...).
They traded the first two games, with Daryl always ahead in the first, and
Steve never letting go of the second. The rallies were long as both probed
for openings.
A
few careless errors from Daryl in the middle of the third, and Steve was
ahead, with the youngster starting to get a bit ratty with himself and the
referee. Meads, meanwhile, moved serenely on, moving as well as ever,
getting forward at every opportunity, winning the rallies although Daryl
never looked out of it.
Daryl was back in control in the fourth as the match reached an inevitable
decider. Daryl started getting very ratty with the decisions in the early
part of the game. A no let that took Steve to 6/3 prompted a prolonged
discussion and a "that's six decisions against me already this game"
analysis from Daryl.
After
tinning the next serve in frustration the youngster buckled down, kept the
rallies going and two tins and two strokes brought him level. Two more tins
from Meads took it to 9/7. Meads steadied the ship with a lovely drop and a
stroke levelled it again.
At 9-all, with the game already 20 minutes old, six long rallies ended in
six lets. This time it was Daryl's turn to pull out a drop - a long one,
into the nick - to reach match ball, and Meads' turn to get ratty as the
ensuing rally ended in a stroke which didn't find favour with the old
stager.
It was a fitting end to the day, a tense, well-supported match with Daryl
showing he is improving fast, and Steve that he's not ready to lie down just
yet ... |
"I
thought I played really well throughout. I started well but Steve was in
control in the second. Then in the third I felt in control of the
rallies, but he's so strong, so quick, and I kept just clipping the tin
trying to find a winner.
"At 2-1 down I knew I was playing well, hitting the ball cleanly, so I
knew I could still win.
"Even if I'd lost it in the end I would have been happy with how I'd
played.
"I like playing BSPA events, you always get good match."
Daryl Selby |
"It
all seemed to be going my way in the fifth, but he held it together and
played well from then on, he didn't make many mistakes.
"The decisions probably worked out in my favour overall, but it was a
bit disappointing to lose the match on a stroke decision like that.
"I should probably let these youngsters go gracefully past me, but
I'm not ready to do that just yet ..."
Stephen Meads |
|
Alex Advances,
no sweat for Joey ...
3/4 seeds
Joey Barrington and Simon Parke both enjoyed their second straight-game wins
of the day, Barrington picking up after a close first game against Scott
Handley, and Parke giving a packed crowd on court one half an hour's good
entertainment as he displayed all his old speed against Tim Vail.
There were many well worked and entertaining rallies, but it seemed that
Simon was able to soak up everything that Tim could throw at him. |
"It
was a wonderful match, squash played the way it should be. There were so
few errors, really entertaining and played in a great spirit, just
fabulous."
Maureen Maitland
Match referee, Parke v Vail |
|
Top Two Through
Top
seeds Azlan Iskandar and Alex Gough both made it safely
through to the quarters.
Azlan always looked in control against Ricky Davies on the showcourt - "The
court is very fast, but a but deader than the other ones, it takes a shot
well," - he commented.
Meanwhile Gough dropped the third game against Sam Miller but responded to
take the fourth comfortably.
|
"This
is my seventh match this week, I just didn't have enough left today. On
top of that Azlan's getting onto the ball pretty quick these days.
"I played in the tri-nation series between Wales, Scotland and
Netherlands his week, had four matches in 24 hours which was hard, but I
had a good win against Dylan Bennett.
"Now I've got four league games next week before the Swiss Open. I've
just joined PSA so I'll be trying to get some points together over the
rest of the season."
Ricky Davies |
|
Whippy Beats Ben
Again
Andy Whipp bt [5/8] Ben Garner
11/9, 11/4, 12/10 |
Andy Whipp told us earlier that he was in good form, beating
virtually everyone put in front of him this season.
Well tonight he beat 5/8 seed Ben Garner, as he did in the BSPA
Boston Open, in straight games, looking pretty impressive.
He was always on top in the first two, and looked to be cruising at 8/3 in
the third, but a number of silly errors gave Ben the sniff of a comeback as
he lengthened the rallies and worked his way back to 9-all.
Andy then got the better of a long exchange to reach match ball, which Ben
saved with an outrageous service return into the nick.
On the next match ball though, Andy worked Ben around the court, and
although Ben was disappointed with a no let decision, when both players were
happy to play a let, it just wasn't going to be his night tonight.
|
"It was a bit of a scrappy game, and I got a few lucky nicks at the
right time, but overall I played well.
"In Boston it was much closer, three-tie-breaks in four games. I think I
played about the same but Ben was a bit below that level."
Andy Whipp
"He played well, I didn't, simple as that."
Ben Garner
|
|
Bowles and Wright
beat the odds ...
In one of two upsets in the women's draw, Northumbria's Sarah Bowles
came from two down to beat Pontefract's 5/8 seed Deon Saffery.
Having fought her way back into the match, taking the third on a tie-break
and the fourth comfortably, Sarah looked in command as she went ahead 7-2 in
the decider. But a series of overhead errors, going for the winner too soon
and hitting the tin, allowed Deon to level at 7-all. A tight length steadied
the ship, taking Sarah to match ball, and an unretrievable drop gave her the
win.
Jenny Wright made quick work of Fiona Moverley in the other upset.
Back after spells in the US and Egypt, Jenny is starting to take her squash
seriously again and it seems to be paying dividends.
No worries for the top seeds as they all won in straight games. Bowles and
Ireland's Laura Mylotte could pose strong challenges to Georgina
Stoker and Sarah Kippax in tomorrow morning's quarters, although
Wright and Leonie Holt appear to have their work cut out against top
seeds Laura Lengthorn and Madeline Perry.
Madeline and Laura |
"I
used to play Deon a lot, in junior events and at Pontefract, but I
stopped playing for a while and she moved ahead of me. I only started
playing properly again in the last few weeks, and although I made too
many mistakes in the first two games I was playing for most of the rest
of the match.
"It's Georgina tomorrow, I've been playing her since I was ten, but
she's improved a lot so we'll see ..."
Sarah Bowles |
Jenny Wright
|
Men's
Round One
The men's first round was a full 16 matches, and although some of them were
fairly quick and all the seeds won reasonably comfortably, there were a few
well-contested matches.
It saw the exit of all the
Birmingham University boys as Joel Hinds - who found Daryl Selby as
good as he predicted, Jaymie Haycocks - down in straight games to
Hadrian Stiff - and Steve Coppinger - taking a game off top seed
Azlan Iskandar. |
|
"With two matches a day you can't
afford to hang about, so it was good for me to get the first match over
with quickly."
Joey Barrington
beat
Chris Bentley 3/0 |
|
Scott Handley bt Jonny Harford
11/8, 11/6, 3/11, 11/6 42m) |
Scott Handley was one of a group who flew up from 'down South' this
morning, getting the 8am flight to Edinburgh. Waiting to meet him was one of
the University of Birmingham team, Jonny Harford.
Scott started slowly, several errors helping Jonny to a 5/1 lead, but he
settled, levelled at 7-all and took the first 11/8. From 4-all in the second
he pulled away again to double the lead, but a fast start from Jonny in the
third gave him a lead he held onto - Scott gave the game up at 8/3 - to pull
one back.
The little rest clearly did Scott the power of good as he raced to 8/1 and
10/2 in the fourth. Two tins from Scott and two fine winners from Jonny made
the audience think a comeback might be on, but a loose shot down the middle
resulted in a stroke to Scott and it was over. |
"I
was fighting myself when I had those match balls in the fourth, I made
lots of mistakes, so I had to tell myself "you've not won it yet" and to
rally a bit more.
"I'm looking forward to playing Joey. We've played a few times, and he
beat me for the first time the last match, so it should be interesting."
Scott Handley
beat Jonny
Harford 3/1 |
|
|
"That
was terrible, I've just not been there since I went back to Zimbabwe a
month. I had a good tour of Canada and the US, but since I came back I
haven't won a match.
"We had a tournament over there using wooden rackets, so maybe that
spoilt my game!
"I'm training hard, doing lots of on-court work, so it will come back."
Jesse Engelbrecht
lost to Chris
Simpson 0/3 |
|
"Since I stopped playing PSA events
I've been playing really well, and beating lots of ranked players in
league matches.
"I'm playing Ben Garner tonight. I played him the the last BSPA in
Boston and sneaked a win then, so we'll see ..."
Andy Whipp |
|
Andy Whipp beat Kris
Johnson
11/4, 12/10, 13/11 (33m) |
"I just couldn't get it tight enough,
he was volleying everything. I tried to slow it down but I couldn't.
"I've got another couple of tournaments coming up, so I needed a hard
game like that, it will have done me good."
Kris Johnsen |
|
[5/8] Ben
Garner bt Jonathan Tate
11/7, 11/9, 14/12 |
"That was closer than I would have liked. He's a good player, I had to
work hard to win in three, but it was quite a nice game to start the
tournament with."
Ben Garner |
|
"I was doing well in the first up to seven-all, but he was just too
fast, too quick at the end of the game.
"Then I was 9/8 up in the second, and had my chances and two game balls
in the third, so I feel a bit disappointed to lose 3/0.
"Ben's probably too strong for me, and maybe it sounds a bit strange,
but although I lost I really did enjoy it."
Jonathan Tate
lost to Ben
Garner 0/3 |
|
Women's Round One
It was ladies first in the morning, with the top seven seeds receiving byes
until this evening's second round.
One of the first matches on was France's Laurence Bois against
Katie Wilson from Ulster. Laurence was in command from the beginning,
able to keep the ball tight, forcing weak returns from Katie which she put
away clinically.
The
first two games were quick, both 9/0, but Katie competed well in the third,
matching Laurence for pace, and from 5-all pulled away, taking the last two
points on strokes to pull one back.
France was back in control in the fourth, and although the rallies were
well-contested, it was always Laurence who found the winning position,
taking it 9/0 to complete a strange-looking scoreline as she went through to
face top seed Madeline Perry this evening.
There was success for two locals as Helen Macfie and Louise Philip,
both based at Edinburgh SC, won through to the second round. Macfie won
three close games against Selina Sinclair, 9/5 9/7 10/8, and Philip, the
Scottish number three, recovered from a 10/9 first-game loss against
Susannah King to win in four.
French interest was doubled as Charlotte Delsinne had a little too
much power for England's Jenny Tamblin, winning in three close games.
Charlotte now meets second seed Laura Lengthorn.
French contingent in Edinburgh
Quickest win of the round was
by Jenny Wright, dropping just a single point as she went through to an
interesting-looking meeting with 5/8 seed Fiona Moverley. |
DRAWS & RESULTS
"I
tried to change my tactics in the third, but it didn't work so I
went back to what I was doing before.
"I played for the French team last year, and I'm hoping to do so again,
I'm working towards that goal.
"Tournaments like this are good for us, good practice, and I'm hoping to
play some more of them, maybe in London."
Laurence Bois
beat Katie
Wilson 3/1 |
"It was a faster pace than I'm used to, I found I was missing the ball
early on. I got used to it as the match went on, but in the fourth
although we had some good rallies I just couldn't win the points.
"I haven't played many tournaments recently, just clubs and
Inter-Counties for Ulster ... maybe I should play more of them ..."
Katie Wilson |
"That
was hard, we had long rallies right from the start and it just carried
on right through the match.
"I haven't played many tournaments recently, but because his is my club
I thought I should. I'm pretty pleased to win a game, but the number one
seed is pretty close in the draw so I don't expect to get too far."
Helen Macfie
beat Selina
Sinclair 3/0 |
|
|