Marche Stuns Former World No.1 Willstrop In Grasshopper Cup by Nathan Clarke
photos PSA
April 14, 2016
- Former World No.1 James Willstrop suffered a shock first round exit
during the 2016 Grasshopper Cup as he fell to a straight-games defeat
at the hands of Frenchman Gregorie Marche inside Zurich's Puls5 earlier
today.
The Englishman, who has won 19 PSA World Tour titles,
was under par from the off and Marche took full advantage to open up
the court and make life difficult for Willstrop.
The first
game was arguably the best of the match as the duo traded points in a
series of high class exchanges, but it was Marche who moved ahead from
the mid-point stage and from then on Willstrop never truly looked like
he would be able to find the killer blow to put Marche away as his
movement was exposed time and again.
"James has been World No.1, he is one of the best players out there so I knew it would be tough," said Marche.
"I'm
really happy to beat him for the first time. I had to be accurate with
my length and not allow him to volley. I don't think he was 100 per
cent but I had to make him work and stay focused until the end and use
my speed so I'm very happy with that win.
"I had to take a
few weeks out myself to recover from a niggle and I'm happy to be back
playing again now and happy that I can move like I did today."
German
Simon Rösner, the number two seed and last year's runner-up, stormed
into the quarter-finals in the last match of the second day as he
dismissed New Zealand's Paul Coll 3-0 to set up a quarter-final match
with Marche.
"I was on my toes all the time because he's a very tough competitor," said Rösner.
"I
knew it would be tough and that's exactly what it was. I'm pleased to
come through in three because you never want to get into a fourth or
fifth game with him because he never stops.
"I tried to
change my tactics a bit today because I think my game is suited to him
so I'm very pleased I managed to stick to the plan today.
"I'm in a position where I have to defend a runner-up finish which isn't easy but I think I play better with pressure."
The
other winners on the second day of competition were Marwan ElShorbagy,
who downed Scotland's Alan Clyne 3-0, and Australian Cameron Pilley who
came back from the brink of defeat against Adrian Waller to secure his
passage to the quarter-finals.
Pilley began the encounter in
sluggish form and was quickly facing down the barrel off a first round
exit but in the third he began to play with improved length, finding
his targets in the back court more frequently to level the playing
field.
The fifth started with Waller back in control to open
up a 6-1 lead but again Pilley dug in and upped his game to reel off 10
unanswered points and save his hopes of success here in Zurich.
"I
think that was tough mentally (to come back from 2-0 down) especially
because he beat me last time we played and I wanted to get revenge for
that," said Pilley.
"But he played really well in the first
two games and I was flat - I had nothing. It was a matter of playing a
lot smarter in the third, fourth and fifth and I'm proud of the
comeback and I think I finished the match quite strongly.
"It's
great to have big crowd here on the first round it is something
we really appreciate it so it;'s great to be here and come through."
Draw - Quarter-Finals: [1] Gregory Gaultier (FRA) v [WC] Nicolas Mueller (SUI) [7] Ali Farag (EGY) v Chris Simpson (ENG) [4] Marwan ElShorbagy (EGY) v [5] Cameron Pilley (AUS) Gregoire Marche (FRA) v [2] Simon Rösner (GER)