Detroit Motor City Open Shocker: Unseeded Beng Hee defeats Hisham Ashour For Title by AJ Hakim
January 30, 2012 Bloomfield Hills, Mich. —
After a difficult 2011 that brought him to the brink of retirement, a
rejuvenated Ong Beng Hee completed back-to-back upsets of the two top
seeds to win The 2012 Motor City Open, presented by The Suburban
Collection. The Maylasian's shocking finals victory Monday night was
his first major pro squash tour championship since 2008.
In front of a sold-out Birmingham Athletic Club crowd, the unseeded
Beng Hee completed a wild four days by sweeping #2 seed and World #14
Hisham Mohd Ashour, 11-8, 11-9, 11-7. The win netted the veteran a
Rolex Explorer II watch, courtesy of sponsor Greenstone Jewelers, a
first place check of $8,000, and a standing ovation from the packed
house.
“After I won the last point, I was very emotional,” said the
31-year-old who in December contemplated retirement following
first-round exits in 10 of his 13 tournament appearances in 2011. “It’s
been a very long road up to here.”
The road to the championship was an exhausting one for the World # 34.
Beng Hee survived five-game marathons against Gregoire Marche and
Cameron Pilley in the first two rounds before sweeping defending
champion and World # 6, Mohamed El Shorbagy, in the semifinals.
Executing a flawless game plan against the talented Ashour, Beng Hee
capped his week with another three-game sweep.
“For me, this tournament has been everything and luck,” Beng Hee said.
“Managing to beat Cameron Pilley in five while having cramps - and
Cameron cramping as well - that’s never happened before. And to be able
to beat Shorbagy yesterday and then back it up to beat Hisham today. .
. . Luck played a big part.”
The Egyptian Ashour, famed for his deft racket and crafty shots,
struggled with the bouncy club court - often forcing shots out of
frustration. In the first game alone, he made nine unforced errors.
“The (expletive) ball was bouncing like a like a tennis ball,” the
colorful Ashour said afterwards. “I couldn’t put it anywhere. Every
time I was putting it somewhere it was popping up again, so I couldn’t
make him do the work. It was all in his favor. He controlled the whole
situation. I’m a bit disappointed. I feel pain. But I’ll live.”
For Beng Hee, who as a 19-year old advanced to the 2000 MCO semifinals
and a World #7 ranking, it’s now about returning to form and ending his
career on a high note.
“It took me a long time and I wanted to justify my retirement. I’m
going to retire as high as I can," he said. “I’ve given myself another
year, hopefully two. And to be able to win this tournament - what a
feeling.”