Experience Outweighed Youth In Women's Tournament of Champions by Matt Wagg
photos courtesy SquashPics.com
January 27, 2012 -
Natalie Grinham demonstrated a perfect example of experience over youth
on her way to winning the WSA Tournament of Champions title at Grand
Central Station, New York City.
The Dutch international overcame prodigal Egyptian teenager Nour El
Sherbini in the semi finals, followed by 20-year-old Pallikal in the
event final.
El Sherbini started quickly against Grinham, drawing on confidence
already gained by defeating No3 seed Samantha Teran and local hope
Latasha Khan on her way to the semi’s. The teenager established a
quick first game lead over Grinham, who then came back refocused to
claim the following two games. El Sherbini, demonstrating a rare
maturity and court intelligence for someone of her 16 years, didn’t
back down under the pressure and instead dug deep to claim the fourth
game.
It turned out to be one game too many for the teenager, her twelfth
over the tournament, as Grinham was able to establish an early lead in
the fifth and close out the game with seven match balls. “Nour
changed her game a bit in the fourth,”
Reflected Grinham. “I let her dictate the points, thinking that I
would let her lose the match rather than try to win it. In the
fifth I knew I had to just go out and win it.”
Grinham would then face Dipika Pallikal, who won a 3-0 upset over No5
seed Jaclyn Hawkes in their semi final. Pallikal of India
succeeded in dominating the tee and was confident in stepping forward
for the early volley, a tactic to which her New Zealand opponent had no
steady reply.
The determination of the No7 seed was evident following the scalp,
telling interviewers: “I won’t be happy until I have finished my job
and won the tournament.”
Determination wasn’t going to be enough for Pallikal however, as
Grinham’s tour experience paid dividends in the final. The
20-year-old was never allowed to settle into the match as Grinham
demonstrated methodical shot selection and impeccable court
coverage. 25-minutes was all it took for the No2 seed to play out
the final, utilising a good length and width to deny Pallikal time in
the middle of the court, and subsequently, the young player never
looking likely to threaten the higher seed.
The Indian national champion professed to twitter followers after her
ninth match in ten days: “Horrible day on court today. Legs just
gave up. Hard few weeks on court.”
The 2012 Tournament of Champions winner revealed after the match
exactly how she set about defeating an opponent 13-years her
junior: “Dipika is quite handy with the racket and she volleys
well so I made sure not to put the ball where she could easily reach
it.”
Grinham’s win is her 17th WSA title and her first Tournament of Champions win.