A
History Of The North American Doubles Championship
by Rob Dinerman
This past 2010-11
season featured
the 27th edition of the North American Open Doubles Championship, which
debuted in 1984 and has been held every year since then (including
twice in 1986, first in the winter of that year and then again the
following autumn) except 1992 and 2002. The Greenwich Country Club,
which spearheaded the early years of the tournament (one of its
squash-playing members, Michael Kirby, was an executive with Xerox, the
event’s initial title sponsor, which was based in nearby
Stamford), was later joined by Round Hill in ‘93 and the
Field
Club of Greenwich in 2003, resulting in the present-day tri-club
partnership that extends to the associated festivities, the
exceptionally well-subscribed pro-am competition and the underwriting
of the purse. It is due to the generosity and enthusiasm of the
membership at these three clubs, as well as the active participation of
many other squash doubles aficionados in the Greenwich metropolitan
area, that this most prized of doubles titles under the U. S. SQUASH
aegis continues to maintain its standing as one of the truly
significant events on the American squash calendar.
In examining the
Champions Roster located in the Greenwich Country Club’s
squash
clubhouse (known as the Squash House prior to the major 2005
renovation, after which it was re-named the Converse House to honor
Edmund Cogswell Converse, one of the club’s Founding Fathers
back
in 1892), one is immediately struck by the fact that it contains the
names of only 19 individual players (far fewer than half the
theoretically possible total of 54), as well as just 13 separate teams,
several of whom have at least one player who was also part of another
title-winning pairing. This points up the degree to which the history
of this event has been filled with repeat winners and a series of mini-
(and in one emphatic case, not at all mini-) -dynasties, the most
notable of which, of course, was the Gary Waite/Damien Mudge juggernaut
that captured this crown six consecutive times beginning in 2000 before
they barely surrendered it in the ’07 final against Paul
Price
and Ben Gould, who had to survive third- and fourth-set tiebreakers
before earning the fifth in somewhat more routine 15-10 fashion.
The domination
that this all-time-best tandem evinced during that lengthy skein can be
found (1) in the fact that those seven finals were against seven
different teams (Willie Hosey/Jamie Bentley in ’00,
Hosey/Viktor
Berg in ’01, Hosey/Michael Pirnak in ’03, Blair
Horler/Clive Leach in ’04, Hosey/Leach in ’05,
Chris
Walker/Berg in ’06 and Price/Gould in ‘07); (2) in
Waite
actually having won NINE straight North American Opens, his sextet with
Mudge having been directly preceded by a three-straight run from
1997-99 with Mark Talbott; and (3) in Mudge having reached the last 11
North American Open finals, seven straight, as noted, with Waite and
then three-straight (2008-10), two of them triumphant, as
Berg’s
left-wall partner, and then this past winter of 2011 with Gould as part
of their undefeated wire-to-wire surge through the entire 2010-11
campaign. Mudge and Waite are the only players to have won this
championship on each wall, as Waite was playing the right when he won
his initial North American Open in ’94 in partnership with
Scott
Dulmage.
The Waite/Talbott
duo is the third to have won this tourney three years in a row --- Todd
Binns and the late Tom Page accomplished this feat from 1986-88 (the
’86 win occurring in their first-ever foray as teammates), as
did
Alan Grant and Ned Edwards from 1989-91. Binns (who spent several
early-1980’s years fearful of playing doubles after incurring
a
severe ankle injury on a doubles court early in his career) and Page
mostly overpowered their opponents (though Binns also was a lethal
shot-maker) during this late-1980’s era when the ball was
especially lively; during their best season in 1987-88, they came
within a single match of posting an undefeated season-long slate before
finally dropping a four-game final to Grant and Jamie Bentley in the
Elite Doubles in Philadelphia, the last event on the schedule. (Waite
and Mudge went undefeated three times, in 1999-2000, 2001-02 and
2004-05.)
For both Grant
and his Canadian compatriot Bentley, that reversal foreshadowed
impressive doubles success --- Grant, as mentioned, would begin his
Greenwich trilogy with Edwards the very next season before their reign
was ended when Bentley and Kenton Jernigan took their title away in
’93 and began several dominant seasons of their own. Theirs
was a
more “textbook” doubles team (with Bentley
supplying enough
right-wall forehand power to provide shot-making opportunities and open
balls for his aggressive left-wall partner Jernigan to exploit) than
the power-hitting Binns/Page tandem or that of the Desaulniers
brothers, Michael and Brad, who overwhelmed their opponents en route to
two consecutive mid-1980’s North American Open titles not
with
power but by relentlessly forcing the action, volleying everything,
hitting the ball before their opponents had completed their
follow-throughs or caught their breath, and generally creating a
suffocating energy zone that melted the strength and spirit of their
adversaries.
The 1985-86
season in which the second of those triumphs occurred was the last of
Michael Desaulniers’s career. After being ranked No. 1 on the
singles tour for the 1981-82 season (during which he also won the North
American Open singles title, finally wresting it away from its six-year
captivity with Sharif Khan) and slumping during several injury-plagued
subsequent years, he completed a hugely successful comeback 1985-86
singles campaign, including reaching the finals of both the WPSA
Championship and the Xerox Canadian Open (where he defeated Talbott
before losing to Jahangir Khan), then promptly retired at age
29,
having thereby attained the redemption to which he had committed
himself. Michael Desaulniers is one of only four players --- Talbott,
Edwards and Waite are the others --- who have won North American Open
crowns in both singles and doubles, and Talbott, with four titles in
Doubles and five in singles, is the only player to have won each on
multiple occasions.
Talbott’s
only title prior to his late-1990’s collaboration with Waite
came
in the inaugural event in February 1984, when he and Field Club of
Greenwich “alumnus” Peter Briggs (who learned
squash well
enough there as a youngster to become both a New England
Interscholastic titlist at Middlesex and later a two-time
Intercollegiate Individual champ at Harvard) prevailed over Michael
Desaulniers and Maurice Heckscher in the final. Briggs displayed both
his partner versatility that 1983-84 season (also winning the
Philadelphia Elite and Metropolitan Open with Dave Johnson, the Heights
Casino event with Gul Khan, the Racquet & Tennis Invitational
with
Larry Hilbert and the U. S. National Mixed Doubles with Joyce
Davenport) and his longevity some years later when at age 45 he teamed
with Jeff Stanley to annex the ’95 North American Open title,
11
years after his exploits with Talbott!
Briggs’s
standing in the Greenwich squash community may have played a role in
the mid-1980’s landmark decision to expand the major annual
Greenwich Country Club squash doubles tournament from the highly
popular amateur “Greenwich Invitation Squash Doubles
Tournament” it had been for more than a half-century (45
editions’ worth, debuting the weekend before Thanksgiving in
1931
and continuing all the way through 1982, excepting only 1933-34 and a
four-year World War II-caused hiatus from 1943-46) to the prize-money
top-tier professional tournament that the North American Open,
bolstered for its first half-dozen years by Xerox, would swiftly
become. The fact that the World Pro Squash Association (WPSA) tour had
made such impressive strides under Sharif Khan and the Association
President Clive Caldwell throughout the early-1980’s
doubtless
had an impact as well. The North American Open Doubles event, which in
its early years opened with a Friday-night exhibition match featuring
two WPSA pros along with Greenwich Country Club members and former New
York Mets pitching stars Tom Seaver and Craig Swan, has been an
important fixture on the pro squash doubles calendar through the WPSA
years, throughout the 1990’s when the WPSA was incorporated
into
the international Professional Squash Association (PSA) and during the
decade-plus that has ensued since the formation of the International
Squash Doubles Association (ISDA) in January 2000 up to the present
time.
There have been
some amazingly entertaining matches deep in the draws of the North
American Open Doubles, including the margin by which ’96
champions Scott Stoneburgh and Anders Wahlstedt were stopped just one
simultaneous-championship-point short of a successful defense in
’97 on a Waite backhand cross-court blast past Wahlstedt that
jump-started the three-year Waite/Talbott run that would follow. That
was the second time that an attempted title defense foundered on a
simultaneous-match-point defeat: ’93 title-holders Bentley
and
Jernigan lost a one-point semi the following year to Briggs and
Talbott, who then fell to the Canadian dynamos Waite and Dulmage,
though Briggs, partnered by Stanley, would win a three-hour 15-13
fifth-game final one year later against Talbott and Stoneburgh.
Two-time
(’07 and ’09) champions Price and Gould would never
have
had the chance to stage their comeback from two-love down in the
’07 final against six-time defenders Waite and Mudge had
they
not first survived a 17-16 fifth-game semi the day before against Scott
Butcher and Leach, who four years earlier (i.e. in 2003) had also lost
a one-point-in-the-fifth semi against an eventual champ as he and
Horler came up barely short vs. Waite/Mudge when on the last point an
erratic ball-bounce caused Horler to whiff on his swing. Whatever
happens in coming years is bound to both add to the rich tradition of
this coveted championship (whose winning members have their names
hand-lettered in gold leaf on The Board in the Greenwich Country
Club’s Converse House just beyond the left side-wall of the
glass-back-wall doubles court, joining a list that extends back to the
inaugural amateur tourney in 1931) and serve as a probable tipping
point that defines the course and character of any ISDA campaign.
Champions List
1984 Peter Briggs/Mark
Talbott
1985 Michael
Desaulniers/Brad Desaulniers
1986 (winter) Michael
Desaulniers/Brad Desaulniers
1986 (fall) Todd
Binns/Tom Page
1987 Todd Binns/Tom Page
1988 Todd Binns/Tom Page
1989 Alan Grant/Ned
Edwards
1990 Alan Grant/Ned
Edwards
1991 Alan Grant/Ned
Edwards
1992 -- not
held ---
1993 Kenton
Jernigan/Jamie Bentley
1994 Scott Dulmage/Gary
Waite
1995 Peter Briggs/Jeff
Stanley
1996 Scott
Stoneburgh/Anders Wahlstedt
1997 Gary Waite/Mark
Talbott
1998 Gary Waite/Mark
Talbott
1999 Gary Waite/Mark
Talbott
2000 Gary Waite/Damien
Mudge
2001 Gary Waite/Damien
Mudge
2002 --- not held ---
2003 Gary Waite/Damien
Mudge
2004 Gary Waite/Damien
Mudge
2005 Gary Waite/Damien
Mudge
2006 Gary Waite/Damien
Mudge
2007 Paul Price/Ben
Gould
2008 Damien
Mudge/Viktor Berg
2009 Paul Price/Ben
Gould
2010 Damien
Mudge/Viktor Berg
2011 Damien Mudge/Ben
Gould Editor’s
Note: The author
would like to extend his appreciation to Morris Clothier, Steve Scharff
and Jack Farley for their phone interviews and the extensive assistance
they provided in researching this article.