Profile Of Ed Garno, US National Doubles
Champion by Rob Dinerman
Dateline June 7, 2018
----- One of the most noteworthy developments in US doubles squash in
recent years has been the ascent of Ed Garno, who this past March
became, at age 49 years, 5 months and 21 days, the oldest player ever
to win the U. S. National Doubles championship when he teamed up with
his six-year partner Alex Stait to defeat, sequentially, Ricky
Weisskopf and Richard Dodd, Alex Luque and Imran Khan and the Round
Hill Club pairing of Steve Scharff and Zac Alexander in a four-game
final in Philadelphia that ended with Garno knifing a forehand
reverse-corner winner at match-ball. The previous oldest-ever winner of
this tournament, the late Victor Elmaleh, was also 49 when he and Vic
Niederhoffer won in St. Louis in 1968, but Garno was two months older
when he and Stait triumphed than Elmaleh was when the tournament was
held 50 years ago.
Remarkably, Garno did not take up squash until he was well into
his 30’s. Although he attended Haverford School during the mid-1980’s,
a time throughout which the school squash team, featuring such future
stars in college and beyond as Morris Clothier, Russ Ball and Chris
Spahr, was in the midst of a dynastic run that extended from the late
1970’s until the early 1990’s, Garno’s primary sports during his
middle-school and high-school years were football (as the team’s
starting quarterback and punter), baseball (he played shortstop) and
tennis. He then went to the University of Virginia, where he was the
first-string punter on teams that played in bowl games in each of his
last three years (namely the Florida Citrus Bowl against Illinois in
1990, the Sugar Bowl against Tennessee in 1991 and the Gator Bowl vs.
Oklahoma in 1992) and made all-Academic ACC all of those three years,
as well as all-ACC and Honorable Mention all-America during his senior
year. He then returned to tennis and spent the next dozen-odd years
winning numerous (more than two dozen) Merion Cricket Club,
Waynesborough Country Club and regional singles and doubles
championships on both grass and clay in that sport.
Although Garno started playing squash midway through the first
decade of the 2000’s, initially more as a way of keeping fit during the
winter months than as a game to pursue with competitive aspirations, it
was his connection with former WPSA superstar and US Squash Hall of
Famer Ned Edwards approximately seven years ago which caused the
sea-change in Garno’s improvement in and commitment to doubles squash
that led to his stellar recent results. Fortuitously, it was also right
around this time frame that the British-born Stait, a former PSA pro
singles player who had attained a ranking just outside the top 50
before a recurring knee injury forced him to retire from the tour and
shift his energies to coaching, moved to America after being hired as
an assistant coach at Merion in January 2012. A standing game developed
featuring Edwards/Garno against Stait and former WPSA standout (and
extraordinarily successful Harvard squash coach from 1992-99) Bill
Doyle during the spring and summer of 2012, throughout which this
foursome would play several times per week. Garno and Stait made swift
and steady progress in learning the nuances of doubles from the two
decorated veterans Edwards (a three-time North American Open Doubles
Champ from 1989-91 with Alan Grant) and Doyle, a North American Open
finalist with Hugh Labossier in 1987).
The following autumn, Doyle relocated to Boston and Edwards was
forced by a lingering knee injury to reduce his playing, but by then
Stait and Garno felt they were ready to join forces and enter Open
tournaments. Although their SDA debut at an event at the Racquet Club
of Philadelphia in February 2013 had a disappointing ending --- with a
15-14 fifth-game loss to Carl Baglio and Gilly Lane --- they played
well enough in that match and those that followed to convince them that
they belonged at this level. It took them a few years to learn their
way around the tour, absorbing some close losses along the way but also
starting to earn their way into main draws and occasionally attaining
the quarterfinals. Throughout that time, Garno doggedly tracked down
games with top-level players, occasionally even traveling back and
forth to New York when an especially strong practice game presented
itself, and by Spring 2016 they were ready for a breakthrough
performance at the season-ending Challenger tournament at the Racquet
& Tennis Club in midtown Manhattan.
With Garno having come up short three times in the finals of
Open events earlier that season --- with Stait in the William White to
Josh Schwartz/Tim Wyant, with Edwards in the Century event to Dominic
Hughes/Nigel Thani and with Narelle Krizek in the US Mixed Doubles in
five games against James Stout and Suzie Pierrepont --- and with Stait
having recently missed some time with a shoulder strain, the pair
entered the Challenger event just hoping that they would be able to get
through the tough qualifying draw that awaited them. They did,
surmounting a 14-11 first-game deficit en route to a straight-game win
over Stout and Barney Tanfield and then out-playing Travis Judson and
James Bamber. Building on the momentum they thereby generated, Stait
and Garno ambushed the top-seeded Randy Lim/Hamed Anvari duo in the
quarters and followed up with a semifinal win over qualifiers Lane and
Fred Reid Jr., five-game first-round upset winners over fourth seeds
Andres Vargas and John Roberts.
In the final against Imran Khan and Greg McArthur,
Stait and Garno, after dropping the opening game, took both the second
and third 15-14. Khan and McArthur rallied to force a fifth game, but
Stait and Garno raced off to an early lead and never looked back,
sprinting to the finish line with a 15-8 tally that made them the first
qualifying team to win a ranking event since the pro doubles
association was renamed the SDA (after a 12-year run as the ISDA) in
2012. Afterwards, they explicitly praised and thanked Edwards and Doyle
for having, as Stait phrased it, “taught us how to play a few summers
ago at Merion. We learned together and have played together ever since.
That’s really the key for us, playing together all the time and
enjoying it.” Indeed, they are the team on the SDA tour that has stayed
together the longest as partners by a substantial margin: no other SDA
team has been intact even as long as TWO years, let alone six, other
than the top-ranked pairing of Manek Mathur and Damien Mudge, who have
only been partners dating back to September 2016, three and a half
years after Stait and Garno became teammates.
During the subsequent 2016-17 season, after losing in the final
of the William White the previous two years, Stait and Garno captured
this prestigious title in a three-game final over Merion pros Scott
Devoy and Dane Sharp, which made Garno, who had teamed with Rob
Whitehouse to win the William White 40-and-over flight in 2012, perhaps
the only player to have won the White Open division AFTER having won a
White age-group category. Later that winter they achieved perhaps their
best SDA win at the Baltimore Cup at the expense of the highly regarded
Jacques Swanepoel and Shaun Johnstone, which elevated them to the cusp
of the top 20 in the SDA rankings. A few months after that, Garno and
Krizek won the US Mixed Doubles with a four-game triumph over Dave
Rosen and Victoria Simmonds in the defining match-up of that five-team
round-robin.
This past season, after winning the US National Doubles,
Stait and Garno reached the semis of the Racquet & Tennis
Challenger event via a 3-0 quarterfinal over Baglio and Kyle Martino.
Their attempted title defense in this biennial event was then foiled by
the eventual champs Stout and McArthur, who would go on to defeat
Swanepoel and Jordan Greenberg in the final. Although Stait and Garno
play a somewhat limited SDA schedule (seven tournaments this past
season) due to Stait’s commitments as Director of Squash at Agnes Irwin
--- a position he has held for the past five years at this private
all-girls school in suburban Philadelphia, which he led to the Inter-Ac
pennant and a second-place finish at the US National High School
Championships in 2018 --- they are nevertheless both listed in
the top 35 of the SDA rankings and fully plan to be an active
partnering presence on the 2018-19 tour (which begins shortly after
Garno’s 50th birthday this coming September 11th) and for the
foreseeable future.