World's Top Juniors Unite Behind Squash 2020 Olympic Bid from WSF Media
22 July 2013
- Despite battling against each other over the past week for the title
of 'world junior squash champion', the world's leading teenagers
competing in the WSF World Junior Championships in Poland are
unequivocally united behind the sport's bid to join the Olympic Games
programme in 2020.
"It would be a dream
come true," said Nour El Sherbini, the 17-year-old Egyptian who made
squash history on Sunday by becoming the first player to win the world
junior title for a third time.
"There are still seven
years left, but I hope I will be at the top of my game by then and will
have a chance to show that at the Olympics," added the remarkable
youngster who is already ranked 11 in the world.
More than 160 players
from a record 37 nations have been competing in the 2013 championships
at the spectacular new 19-court Hasta La Vista Club in Wroclaw - the
event's first staging in Poland.
The championships have
already ensured their place in squash history: The top eight seeds in
the men's event hailed from seven different nations and four separate
continents - with 16-year-old Diego Elias the event's first ever
representative from Peru.
Elias went on to reach
the quarter-finals, where he was joined by Abdulla Mohd Al Tamimi from
Qatar and Yousif Nizar Saleh from Kuwait - all three marking firsts for
their countries in the last eight round. Al Tamimi achieved further
notable success for Qatar by making the last four.
Without a gold medal
in the Games since 2004, Egypt laid a powerful claim on a first Squash
Olympic Games gold medal in 2020 by winning both the men's and women's
world junior titles in Poland.
After the players
joined together for a picture (see below) to show their united support
for the sport's 2020 Olympic Games bid - all of whom would be at their
peak in 2020 - several spoke out to endorse the Squash campaign.
"Peru has never won an
Olympic Gold medal and I want to be the first!" said Diego Elias.
"There are many courts in Peru and for players to see squash in the
Olympic Games will be great for them."
Qatari Abdulla Mohd Al
Tamimi added: "Everybody dreams to play in the Olympics. If we are
given a place I will be at my best age in 2020, so it would be
wonderful.
"In Qatar, being in
the Olympics will bring more people to squash, and everywhere else as
well. Squash will get even bigger I am certain."
Salma Hany Ibrahim, a
16-year-old Egyptian who reached the women's quarter-finals, said:
"It's a huge thing to play an Olympic sport. It would really mean a lot
to get squash into the Olympics."
England outsider Lyell
Fuller, a 17-year-old who became the only unseeded player to make the
quarter-finals, added: "It's my dream to play in the Olympics."