Nicol David Makes History As Longest-Reigning World No.1 Ever by Howard Harding
1 February 2015
- Malaysian Nicol David has created a new world record for the length
of time a squash player has topped the world rankings after marking her
106th month as world number one in the February Women's World Squash
Rankings published by the Women's Squash Association.
The 31-year-old from Penang, who first headed the WSA list in January
2006, overtakes the 105-month record set in February 1993 by Susan
Devoy, the four-time World Champion and eight-time British Open
champion from New Zealand.
David's phenomenal achievement is the latest milestone in a glittering
career which has included a record eight World Championship titles, two
Commonwealth Games gold medals and four (quadrennial) Asian Games gold
medals. This month also sees Datuk David extend her unbroken reign at
the top of the world rankings to 103 months since August 2006 - 45
months ahead of her nearest rival, Dame Devoy!
The record was saluted at last month's JP Morgan Tournament of
Champions in New York, where Tournament Chairman John Nimick and
Associate Director Beth Rasin presented David with a congratulatory
poster signed by the rest of the world's top players.
"Nicol's accomplishments place her among the greatest athletes in
history, and she has certainly elevated our sport," said Nimick
(pictured above with David and Rasin) as he identified other No.1
record holders, including golfer Tiger Woods (138 months), 400 metre
hurdler Edwin Moses (132 months); snooker's Stephen Hendry (108 months)
and tennis player Steffi Graf (94 months). "Nicol's passion for the
game and her desire to always be the best she can be inspires us all."
WSA Chief Executive Tommy Berden praised the Tour's biggest star: "To
become number one in the world is a unique and outstanding performance
in itself, but to hold the top spot for 106 months is simply
astonishing.
"It's a fabulous accomplishment that deserves to be recognised and I am
delighted that the Tournament of Champions took the liberty to put
Nicol in the limelight for yet another one of her remarkable
achievements!"
Amr Shabana, the four-time world champion from Egypt who headed the
men's world rankings for 33 months between 2006 and 2008, noted: "I
have known Nicol since she was 11 years old and, even then, I knew she
was special. What she has done in squash is amazing ..... and she isn't
done yet!"
David herself was characteristically modest: "Being number one is
something you have to earn every day," said the Malaysian superstar.
"For me, it is really about playing the tournaments. Everything else is
a bonus."
Whilst Raneem El Welily (Egypt), Laura Massaro (England), Nour El
Sherbini (Egypt) and Alison Waters (England) retain positions two to
five, respectively, 21-year-old Egyptian Nour El Tayeb jumps two places
to a career-high No.6 in the February WSA rankings.
England's 29-year-old Emma Beddoes, who notched her 15th WSA World Tour
final appearance in 2014, is also rewarded with a best-ever ranking of
15.
February 2015 top 20 (inc. points average):
1 [1] Nicol David MAS 3,446
2 [2] Raneem El Welily EGY 2,580
3 [3] Laura Massaro ENG 2,145
4 [4] Nour El Sherbini EGY 1,548
5 [5] Alison Waters ENG 1,538
6 [8] Nour El Tayeb EGY 1,182
7 [6] Camille Serme FRA 1,158
8 [7] Low Wee Wern MAS 1,063
9 [9] Omneya Abdel Kawy EGY 944
10 [11] Amanda Sobhy USA 764
11 [10] Annie Au HKG 763
12 [13] Rachael Grinham AUS 657
13 [14] Dipika Pallikal IND 632
14 [15] Madeline Perry IRL 683
15 [18] Emma Beddoes ENG 555
16 [16] Sarah-Jane Perry ENG 542
17 [19] Jenny Duncalf ENG 540
18 [17] Nouran Gohar EGY 528
19 [20] Sarah Kippax ENG 520
20 [21] Nicolette Fernandes GUY 490