Rodrigues Races Through, Darwish Limps Out On Day 4 - US Open by Steve Cubbins Colombia's Miguel Angel Rodrigues - photo courtesy Steve Cubbins
October 1, 2011- After the top half of the draw saw all the expected players progress, today it was turn of the players in the bottom half.
England's Adrian Grant got the ball rolling, beating Shawn Delierre in
straight games after initial problems dealing with the Canadian's
unorthodox style. David Palmer was taken close in all three games
against compatriot Ryan Cuskelly, but the veteran's experience told.
Dutchman LJ Anjema also won in straight games, against another
qualifier in Chris Ryder, and Amr Shabana, the 2009 US Open champion,
beat fellow EgyptianWael El Hindi, the reigning champion, in an up and
down four game affair.
The evening session started off with a marvelous display of
running,retrieving and athleticism by Colombia's Miguel Angel Rodrigues
and he effectively ran the ideas out young Egyptian Ali Anwar Reda,
coming from 2/1 down to win in 83 minutes.Thierry Lincou ended home
interest in the men's event with a solid win over wildcard Chris
Gordon, but the evening ended with two retirements.
First, second seed Karim Darwish, carrying an ankle injury, pulled out
during the fourth game of his match with Malaysia's Azlan Iskandar, and
young Swiss Nicolas Mueller went through to the last sixteen without
stepping on court as Jon Kemp was forced to pull out with a back
injury.
In the women's qualifying finals, Australia's Donna Urquhart won her
all-left-handed battle with Joey Chan, and Delia Arnold and Dipika
Pallikal both squandered match ball opportunities to win in straight
games before beating Victoria Lust and Low Wee Wern, both in four games.
Once again it was left to new Harvard student Amanda Sobhy to keep US
interest alive, and she didn't disappoint, with a tough five-game
victory over New Zealand's Jaclyn Hawkes which set up a meeting with
world number two Jenny Duncalf in tomorrow's first round.
Grant works it out
“He’s very unorthodox and hard to read, it took me a game
and a half to work him out,” admitted Adrian Grant after the
Englishman had beaten Canadian qualifier Shawn Delierre in the opening
match of Day Four of the U.S. Open at Drexel University.
Delierre, coming off the back of marathon matches on his way to winning
the Nash Cup last week as well as two qualifying matches here, almost
took the first game, but couldn’t convert two gameball
opportunities at 10/8.
Amidst a series of lets, Grant took the next four points, then won the
next two game comfortably, with Delierre accepting the inevitable from
early in the third.
“Once I found my feet I managed to present my game to him and I felt more and more confident,” added Grant.
Ryan runs into immovable object
David Palmer isn’t an opponent that anyone wants to see against
their name in the first round, and for Ryan Cuskelly, a fellow Aussie
of Palmer’s, it was doubly difficult, coming on the back of two
tough qualifying matches while Palmer, the eighth seed, was fresh.
But young Ryan put up a good show – better than that, he matched
his illustrious opponent for much of the three games. Palmer took a 6/2
lead in the first but Cuskelly fought back to 7/6 before Palmer closed
it out with some typical power hitting. The second was nip and tuck,
but from 9-all it was Palmer who again found the edge, again powering
the winning ball deep.
Only at the start of the third did Cuskelly bow to the pressure as
Palmer opened up to 9/3. Once again though Ryan dug in, got as close as
9/8 and was disappointed to see a probable winning drop at 9/10 just,
just clip the tin.
“I knew he’d keep fighting,” said Palmer after the
match. “I was a couple of points behind in the second but managed
to his some winners at the end, which was crucial, and I probably
relaxed a little after getting a good lead in the third, but I though I
played pretty well to get to that point.
“ If he keeps on playing with an attitude like that it will go well for him in the future.
“I can’t afford long matches, at 35 I need to win 3/0 when
I can, so it was good in the end and I’m looking forward to
coming back tomorrow.”
LJ closes out Chris
Another three-nil result, another qualifier goes no further, but as
Laurens Jan Anjemawill attest, once again it wasn’t quite that
simple.
The Dutch champion was never headed, but Chris Ryder battled well, from
6/2 and 10/3 down in the first, and from 7/3 in the second, he strived
to make it tough without seriously threatening in either game.
A 4/1 deficit in the fourth didn’t deter him either as he made
his way back to 4/3 and 7/5, but Anjema took the final four points,
finishing off rallies he stayed in control of to move into the last
sixteen.
“Chris is very clever tactically,” said Anjema, “so I
had to try to get the upper hand early and try to put him under
pressure physically.
"It was a bit too chaotic for my liking at times, but I’m happy
with how I played and pleased to get off with a three-nil win.”
Shabana wins all-Egyptian Champions’ clash
Amr Shabana won this event in Chicago in 2009, and Wael El Hindi
followed that success in the same city last year, so one recent
champion was sure to go out early.
The early exchanges were won pretty conclusively by Shabana, who too a
good lead in each of the first two games, El Hindi pulling a few points
back in each but never really threatened in games that had mixtures of
short rallies and occasional bursts of speed and typical Egyptian
brilliance.
To be honest I then wend downstairs to see the women’s matches,
and it was something of a surprise to see that El Hindi had pulled a
game back. Certainly in the fourth Shabana assumed early control and
went on the win the game comfortably enough, the match lasting just
short of the hour.
“It’s always difficult playing someone you know so
well,” said Shabana. “Wael hasn’t played a lot of
squash in the last six months, and is just coming back, but he still
made it pretty difficult for me at times.”
Rodrigues “the Cat” strikes
MC Bryan Ramona thought he’s seen some great squash, some
fantastic athletes, and some incredible speed around court last night
in his first experience of world class squash. “You ain’t
seen speed until you’ve seen Rodrigues,” I informed him,
adopting some of the local vernacular.
And he hadn’t either. Displaying some extraordinary running,
retrieving, leaping, diving and unorthodox shotmaking, Miguel Angel
Rodrigues got the better ofAli Anwar Reda in a magical five game match,
11/9, 11/13, 3/11, 11/5, 11/5.
It looked as though the young Egyptian had weathered the storm as he
edged the second to level the match and eased through the third.
But there was no stopping Miguel tonight – I particularly loved
his 360-degree spins, and the dropshot he plays while running
backwards, having dashed to the front after his opponent’s high
boast before engaging reverse gear.
In the end poor old Ali was bamboozled, couldn’t find anywhere to
put the ball that Rodrigues couldn’t get to, and finished up
putting ball after ball into the tin in the final game.
Americans like their nicknames. “We’ll have to call you
‘the Cat’ after that display,” said an impressed
Ramona. He might be right, too.
A tame ending …
After all that excitement, the evening petered out somewhat, as Thierry
Lincou made fairly short work of US wildcard Chris Gordon, throwing in
a few exhibition shots – not all of which worked - towards the
end of his 11/9, 11/5, 11/6 win; second seed Karim Darwish, carrying an
ankle injury into his match with Azlan Iskandar, retired when 2/1 and
7/2 down; and qualifierNicolas Mueller received a walkover after
Jonathan Kemp was forced to pull out with a back injury.
Donna wins left handed tussle
“It felt longer than that,” said Donna Urquhart after
hearing her match with fellow left-hander Joey Chan had lasted 37
minutes for four games. “She was hitting a lot of winners, I
suppose, and getting a lot of quick points whereas I was having to work
for my points!
“She’s a bit of a shot player,” added the Aussie,
“but we had a good few long rallies too, I was trying to nullify
some of her attacking.
“Overall I think I played well, I’ve been trying to
reproduce the form I’m showing in training in match conditions so
it’s good when it comes together on the day.
“All the girls in the main draw are tough, I’m just happy to have qualified …”
Match ball saved in vain
Delia Arnold faced yesterday’s giant-killer Victoria Lust, and
had matchballs for at three-nil win, but had to settle for a
fourth-game victory after Lust came from 7/10 down to take the third.
Arnold won 11/6, 11/9, 10/12, 11/9 in exactly an hour.
Play begins at noon on Sunday, with eight men's second round and eight women's first round matches.
RESULTS: Men's First Round, bottom half:
[4] Amr Shabana (Egy) bt Wael El Hindi (Egy) 11/7, 11/4, 9/11, 11/5 (58m)
Adrian Grant (Eng) bt [Q] Shawn Delierre (Can) 12/10, 11/5, 11/4 (37m)
[8] David Palmer (Aus) bt [Q] Ryan Cuskelly (Aus) 11/8, 11/9, 11/9 (51m)
Laurens Jan Anjema (Ned) bt [Q] Chris Ryder (Eng) 11/6, 11/7, 11/5 (42m)
Miguel Angel Rodriguez (Col) bt Ali Anwar Reda (Egy) 11/9, 11/13, 3/11, 11/5, 11/5 (82m)
[6] Thierry Lincou (Fra) bt Chris Gordon (Usa) 11/9, 11/5, 11/6 (32m)
[Q] Nicolas Mueller (Sui) bt Jonathan Kemp (Eng) w/o back injury
Azlan Iskandar (Mas) bt [2] Karim Darwish (Egy) 11/4, 5/11, 11/7, 7/2 rtd (38m)