Matthew & Gaultier To Contest World Final as Ashour Forced to Retire by Howard Harding
photos courtesy Steve Cubbins
3 November 2013
- The outcome of two contrasting semi-finals of the AJ Bell PSA World
Squash Championship - played before a sell-out crowd at Manchester
Central in Manchester - will see home hero Nick Matthew bid to win his
third world title when he takes on French rival Gregory Gaultier, three
times previously a runner-up, in Sunday's final of the most prestigious
event in world squash.
The first semi-final
brought one of the longest winning streaks on the PSA World Tour to an
end when Matthew, the fourth seed from Sheffield, beat Egyptian
favourite and defending champion Ramy Ashour.
Poised to notch up a
50th successive match win since last losing to Matthew in the British
Open final in May 2012, world No1 Ashour went into the match less than
100% having aggravated a hamstring injury earlier in the week.
But the 26-year-old
from Cairo played a blistering opening game against the Englishman
ranked four in the world - taking the game for the loss of just six
points.
Matthew found his form in the second - reeling off seven points in a row before drawing level.
But after just two
points of the third, Ashour was unable to continue - and conceded the
match, with the score standing at 6-11, 11-2, 2-0 in Matthew's favour.
"I started to feel it
on the last two points of my match with Cameron (Pilley), and somehow
managed to win against Saurav (Ghosal)," said Ashour. "I had a lot of
physio treatment and acupuncture the last two days, and have been
taking pills to try and relax the body and the muscles down.
"I've been pushing on
the other leg, which is not good either, because the other leg is not
supposed to take as much pressure as that. I was keeping on hoping that
things would be fine, I was trying to stay positive, but ....
"It's obviously a big
disappointment for me," continued the defending champion. "I'm going to
go and see what they say in Aspetar, the clinic in Qatar, to see once
again what's wrong with my legs. They say I suffer from fatigue in the
hamstring, and they are not sure if there is something I can do to
prevent this from happening again and again.
"Now, I can't
complain, I had a good season - a great season - and I have to take
that loss like a man and accept that other people had bad times as well.
"But I have no fitness
coach, and I've been stuffing myself with anti-inflammatory pills for
months now, hoping that my body would hold. But the body just can't
take it anymore.
"For the 25th time, I'll try and find a way to play the game without worrying too much about my body."
Whilst the result was
the one Matthew was hoping for, the means of its achievement was not:
"I feel a bit flat right now and my thoughts are with him (Ramy) and
with the crowd and with everyone else really," said Matthew, now in his
third world championship final since 2010 - and the 56th Tour final of
his career.
"I need to make sure
this doesn't hang over into tomorrow. I have to be a bit selfish: I'm
in the final. I need to focus on that.
"When your opponent is injured it can play with your own mind. You have to make sure you don't get distracted.
"The crowd were
brilliant today," added the 33-year-old Yorkshireman. "They really
lifted me in the first game and hopefully there will be more of the
same tomorrow and they can pull me across the line.
"I'm not going to have
not being fresh as an excuse am I? I'm probably never going to go into
a World Championship final feeling as fresh as this," concluded Matthew.
Gaultier reached his
fifth successive final on the PSA Tour - which includes two titles and
losses only to Ashour - after beating Egypt's sixth seed Mohamed
Elshorbagy (both pictured above).
The in-form world No2
had reached the last four without dropping a game - but immediately
went one game down after a superb early performance by his 22-year-old
opponent, ranked six in the world.
Gaultier reclaimed the
initiative in the next two games to move 2/1 ahead - and extended the
rallies in the fourth as Elshorbagy was noticeably tiring.
After a long
energy-sapping rally, the Frenchman moved 8-7 up - and soon afterwards
reached match-ball at 10-8. Elshorbagy salvaged one before a loose shot
hit the tin - leaving Gaultier to celebrate his 6-11, 11-3, 11-8, 12-10
victory - and a place in his fourth final since 2006.
"It was a slow start,"
conceded Gaultier, now in his 55th Tour final. "He started fast and I
didn't really find my length at the beginning and I wasn't really
active so he was all over me. Then when I lost the first game I came
out and my coach really got it into my head to be more focused and more
active.
"You know you work so
hard for these kind of matches and you just try to push yourself and
you push beyond the limits sometimes. That's what it takes to win
matches like this sometimes.
"At the end of the third I knew he was a bit tired because he was asking for the court to be wiped when there was nothing there.
"The game is never
over until he wins the last point so I just tried to stay simple at the
end. Once I got back to 10-all then my chance was there. I kept
pushing, put in intense rhythm and that worked."
On the forthcoming
final, Gaultier said: "I played Nick so many times. He's a tough guy
and he's tough to break but I know what to do. Who is the best on the
day will win. All I need to do is to recover well from today.
"Tomorrow is another
day and I will give all I have on that day. You can do your best and
lose or you can do your best and win; at least I will have no regrets."
RESULTS: AJ Bell PSA World Squash Championship, Manchester, England