Ramy Ashour & Nick Matthew Set Up Sizzling World Semi by Howard Harding
photos courtesy Steve Cubbins
1 November 2013
- Egypt's world number one Ramy Ashour and England's world No4 Nick
Matthew will meet in an eagerly-anticipated AJ Bell PSA World Squash
Championship semi-final in Manchester on Saturday after both prevailed
in straight games quarter-finals at Manchester Central.
With six world
championship titles between them, it was no surprise that the opening
quarter-final between fourth seed Matthew, the two-time champion from
Sheffield, and eighth seed Amr Shabana, the four-time winner from
Egypt, would be a world-class encounter.
And judging from the
oohs and aahs surrounding the new all-glass court at Manchester
Central, that's how the near capacity crowd felt about the spectacle
they enjoyed.
Matthew (pictured
above with Shabana) was in commanding form as he raced to a 4-0 opening
lead - but maestro Shabana pegged back the deficit to a single point
before the Englishman again moved ahead. The 34-year-old left-hander
from Cairo saved two game balls from 10-6 but it was Matthew who went
1/0 up.
A similar pattern
emerged in the second, with Yorkshireman Matthew taking a 3-0 lead
without reply. Shabana was unable to stem his opponent's lead as
Matthew stormed on to take a 2/0 lead.
World No4 Matthew took
the first point in the third, but for the first time in the match
Shabana overtook his opponent to lead 4-1. It was short-lived, however,
as errors crept into the Egyptian's game while Matthew dug deeper.
Shabana saved a single
match-ball, but Matthew ended the next rally by smashing the ball well
beyond the Egyptian's reach to record an 11-8, 11-4, 11-7 victory after
43 minutes.
"I can't get too
carried away by that win," Matthew told MC Andy Kay afterwards. "I've
got to keep my feet on the floor - there are two rounds to go yet.
"He's such a great player. I was really nervous today as he's coming back from injury - so I felt the pressure was on me.
"I feel I'm in the best shape of my life. I've changed one or two things in my training - I'm now doing yoga, for instance.
"I've been inspired by a quote I saw recently on the wall in my gym at the EIS: 'If you're not nervous, you're not ready'.
"'That means you're ready' my wife (Esme) said to me!"
When asked about the
influence of Rugby League star Ellery Hanley, who watched the match
from the front row, Matthew said: "Ellery has been great to me. We
speak quite often. He doesn't say a lot, but what he does say is worth
hearing.
"Having a rest day
tomorrow will give me the chance to do my homework on my semi-final
opponent. Though if it's Ramy, I'd need 182 hours!"
Shabana admitted he
was slightly off the pace, but was pleased with his performance in his
first event after an eight-month layoff with a liver complaint - which
resulted in him being confined to bed for a total of 28 days.
"I'm pleased to have
reached the quarter-finals of the world championship after what I went
through," said the former world number one. "I went half way, so you
have to be optimistic.
"Nick was very sharp
tonight - he did everything right and I was a bit off the pace. You
can't play somebody like Nick unless you're 100% and I would say I was
about 60% tonight.
"I know I can improve
- I just need more match practice. I only led for the first time in the
third game. I was always playing catch-up - and usually it's my
opponents who are playing catch-up!
"Usually when you
lose, you are unhappy," continued Shabana. "But I don't feel like that
- and I want to get back home to continue training.
"I still believe that
on my day I can beat everybody today - including Ramy, Greg, Nick and
James. I want to prove that, at 34, I can still be world number one or
world champion - or even at 35 or 36."
In the day's other
quarter-final, favourite Ashour faced unseeded Saurav Ghosal (both
pictured above), the world No17 from Kolkata who has made history by
becoming the first Indian ever to reach the world championship
quarter-finals.
By contrast, it was
the Egyptian's fourth successive last eight berth in the championship -
which he won both last year and in 2008.
Ghosal, who went into
the match without having previously beaten Ashour in four meetings,
made an impressive start - leading 8-4 and 9-6 in the first game.
But the 26-year-old
from Cairo - later described by Ghosal as "the most original squash
player I have ever seen" - pulled out a succession scintillating shots
to recover the deficit and take the game.
Ashour quickly built
up a 9-1 lead before taking game two. It was nip and tuck throughout
the third until nine-all. After a long rally, Ashour played a deft
backhand volley into the nick, then clinched the match after a further
lengthy exchange which concluded when Ghosal put the ball into the tin.
Ashour admitted later that he'd had hospital treatment that morning for "a niggle in my leg".
"I was very happy with
the win tonight," Ashour told the crowd after his 11-9, 11-5, 11-9
victory. "But it's not just the win, it's the story behind the win!" He
continued by thanking a host of people who had enabled him to achieve
his victory - adding "and the venue here is amazing".
"For the last three
days, I haven't been enjoying my squash," conceded Ashour later to the
event's media. "I've been like a machine. It's been too hard - all my
problems over the past few years have come back, including my groin and
my hamstring.
"It's only been for
the last three years or so that I've been looking after myself properly
- yet I've been playing for about 20 years and wasn't doing the right
things and had nobody to help me."
Ashour shrugged off
any suggestion that he was motivated by his current winning streak:
"I'm not thinking about it at all - I just go on court and do what I
have to do!"
When talking about his
opponent later, Ghosal said: "Ramy can produce performances right now
that nobody can top. I feel privileged to have played in his era - what
we have in Ramy is something very special.
"I think I played
pretty well tonight in the first and third games - I think I handled
myself OK. If I'd won the first game, it could have made a big
difference.
"I'm happy with my
progress," responded Ghosal when asked how he felt about his Indian
breakthrough in the event. "But what I really want to do is win matches
like that today!"
RESULTS: AJ Bell PSA World Squash Championship, Manchester, England
Quarter-finals (top half of draw): [1] Ramy Ashour (EGY) bt Saurav Ghosal (IND) 11-9, 11-5, 11-9 (48m) [4] Nick Matthew (ENG) bt [8] Amr Shabana (EGY) 11-8, 11-4, 11-7 (43m)