NAO Preview: Ramy Roars Back On Top Of The World by Alan Thatcher
February 8, 2013 - Ramy Ashour is where he wants to be as he roars into Richmond for the 2013 Davenport North American Open.
He is world champion, back at world number one and is the top seed for a week of explosive squash at the Westwood Club.
He began 2013 by winning the Tournament of Champions in New York and
showed the world his career was back on track with a dazzling display
at Grand Central Station as he powered back from two games down to beat
Gregory Gaultier in the final.
Despite James Willstrop spending 11 months of 2012 as world number one,
it was Ashour who was voted PSA player of the year after reaching the
final of every tournament he entered, and finishing the year in style
by winning his second World Open Championship in Qatar.
Ramy has reached the last four Richmond finals, beating Nick Matthew in
2009 but then losing to the Englishman two years running. Last year
another Englishman stood in his way of glory as the tall, methodical
James Willstrop put the squeeze on to stop the usual flow of winners
from Ramy’s racket.
Willstrop admitted last year that he had suffered some kind of meltdown
in the previous 12 months as the strain of travel and competition
resulted in a stress overload.
Concerned observers felt the same thing was happening to Ramy. He
admitted as much during a topsy-turvy British Open in London, when
flashes of genius were often followed by lethargic spells laden with
mistakes.
After one troubled performance, in which he scraped past Spaniard Borja
Golan, Ashour admitted he was “mentally all over the place”. He
revealed: “There are a lot of crazy things going on in my head. I am
not quite sane. Maybe I am too emotional.”
That visit to London illustrated his erratic performance patterns.
During another confused, mistake-strewn match against fellow Egyptian
Amr Shabana, the fourth game was shorter than the knock-up as he lost
it 11-1.
Amazingly, he came back to dominate the fifth to set up the match of the tournament against Willstrop.
Ramy was on fire as he overcame Willstrop’s measured ball distribution
with a succession of mesmerising winners. But the next day it was a
different story again as he collapsed in the final against Matthew,
hitting the tin four or five times in every game to gift a third
British open title to his delighted rival.
Pros will take any win, anywhere. They work so hard to get where they
are that it must sometimes be a relief to get an easy win when your
opponent fails to reach his expected standards.
Ramy’s discomort was obvious at one stage against Shabana as he sat at
courtside between games, testing the grip of every racquet in his bag
and discarding them with a flourish until he found one he liked.
He explained: “I keep changing rackets because the grip is very
important to me. If the grip is not right it stops me playing the way I
want to. I need the grip to be just right. I don’t have a very good
record with the racket companies.”
After losing to Matthew, he went walk-about. He was late for the
presentation ceremony and had to be called back to courtside after the
champion had received his third British Open trophy.
Following a long summer break, a resurgent Ramy returned to the court.
He won the Australian Open and then claimed the US Open in October. He
was clearly back to his imperious best.
Having beaten Matthew in the semi-finals and Gregory Gaultier in the
final in Philadelphia, he claimed he had overcome his emotional
turmoil.
In an interview with Squash Player magazine, I asked him if he had
sought any help and he responded: “I just asked the demons kindly to go
away. They listened. The mind is a powerful thing and it’s amazing how
many things can be achieved when you put your head down and fully
concentrate on something.”
Ashour then went on to triumph in the Hong Kong Open, as a delegation
from the IOC looked on, and crowned a spectacular comeback to top form
by being crowned world champion in Qatar in December.
He beat Mohamed El Shorbagy in the final, after two Egyptian victories
over England in the semi-finals, Ashour removing Matthew and Shorbagy
shackling Willstrop, who is still looking for a first World Open title.
The revolution in his mind runs parallel to a revolution on the streets
of Egypt, and Ashour is a passionate supporter of political change to
help his fellow countrymen.
A frequent visitor to Tahrir Square during demonstrations when he is
back home in Cairo, Ashour added: “I love my country and will always be
proud to represent it. We are struggling at the moment and I feel for
the less fortunate people as the revolution was basically raised to
help them and now they are the ones suffering the most.
“Everyone who loves the country is only hoping for a better Egypt. I
just hope that the people in power now care about the disadvantaged
more than their own benefits.”