Gulf Squash Growth Will Yield A World Champion Says Ramy Ashour by Howard Harding
Al Tamimi and Hunt pictured at the World Junior Championships in Poland
14 August 2013
- The significant growth of Squash in Qatar, Kuwait and Jordan will
soon lead to the Gulf region producing a world champion says Egypt's
world number one Ramy Ashour.
"I really believe that
a Gulf country can produce a world champion - there is so much
happening there right now, and it is very intense," declared the
reigning twice world champion from Cairo.
Squash is a major
sport featured at the Aspire Academy for Sports Excellence, the Qatar
centre which was launched in Doha in 2004 and attracted Australian
Institute of Sport director and Squash legend Geoff Hunt to become its
Head Coach in 2006. In conjunction with the Qatar Squash Federation,
the distinguished four-time world champion and eight-time British Open
champion has led Qatari squash forward.
Under the Aspire
Academy's guidance, Qatar's Abdulla Mohd Al Tamimi won last month's
Dutch Junior Open and Pioneer Junior Open in Germany - two of the
leading events on the European Junior Squash circuit - before defying
the seedings by reaching the World Junior Championship semi-finals in
Poland.
The 18-year-old has been awarded a graduate scholarship by Aspire to assist his aspirations to become a top professional.
"Already
Abdulla has had an impact on squash in Qatar and is attracting media
attention," said Hunt. "He is also inspiring the other Aspire Academy
students from all sports as well as other young squash players.
"No other Qatari has
done as well at junior squash as Abdulla. Further success at senior
level will certainly have positive flow onto other aspiring squash
players in Qatar."
Similar success is
being experienced elsewhere in the Gulf region, where highly
professional junior programmes are already bearing fruit on the world
squash stage.
Kuwait's Head Coach
Nasser Zahran said: "Squash is taken very seriously in Kuwait. We have
a programme to build right through from the bottom upwards. The Kuwaiti
Federation uses a team of coaches and physical trainers to improve
skills and fitness levels."
These efforts bore
fruit in Poland last month when Yousif Nizar Saleh became the first
Kuwaiti to reach the quarter finals of the World Junior Championship.
Another emerging
Squash nation is Jordan, whose capital city Amman successfully hosted
the Asian Junior Championships in June this year.
The Jordan junior
programme was started over a decade ago, but took its present form four
years ago, according to Ramzi Tabbalat, President of the Jordan Squash
Federation.
Ahmad Al-Saraj, who
has been under the care of Jordan Squash Federation since first playing
squash at the age of seven, also made history at the Poland World
Championships by becoming the first Jordanian to be seeded in the top
four.
"Having players like
Al-Saraj is key," admitted Tabbalat. "His gradual ascent on the ladder
of world squash is instrumental in providing encouragement and a role
model for the kids.
"The system in Jordan
has revolved around having dedicated coaches to manage training and
waiving all expenses so that families do not have to pay for any
coaching, court times or equipment. We have also renovated squash
courts in other cities in Jordan and provide local coaches. All of this
has made squash presence in the local media very strong."