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Vietnam Open 2008
Hanoi Club, Hanoi, 18-20 Mar, $8k

20-Mar, Final:

[1] Louise Crome (Nzl) bt [5] Joshna Chinappa (Ind)     9/7, 9/1, 9/7 (47m

Report to follow ...

Crome Conquers in Hanoi
WISPA reports from Hanoi

The Buildup

For the rest of the world it may be a surprise that Vietnam is the thirteenth most populous country in the world. For anybody who has been to Hanoi the assault on the senses from people everywhere means it wouldn't be. Over 85 million people here at the last count. Chinese influence abounds, the French have been here, America has cast a shadow; but the first squash invasion to this heavily peopled country was now nearing an end.

The inaugural WISPA Vietnam Open had reached the final day. Local enthusiasts had enjoyed seeing a whole new level of play. A few thought that they could match the WISPA women but were seen off in friendlies. For WISPA it had been an opportunity to take the Tour somewhere new and to introduce the sport to another media group. Aims achieved.

‘Squash is so embryonic in the country that it is without a national squash federation. It hasn't been able to co-ordinate with the rest of the international squash family. But this week has been a catalyst of change’ commented WISPA Chief Executive Andrew Shelley.

‘A volunteer has been found and hopefully soon there will be a link to the proactive Asian Squash Federation. With their help WSF will have another country on its’ books too’, he added.

The Match

But today would be all about one match. New Zealand versus India for the WISPA Vietnam Open title,…… the latest of the WISPA Premiere Series of ‘initiative’ events.

Word had spread. The gallery behind the court was awash with people as the warm up ended. The finalists had to thread their way back to the court door. Taller Indian Joshna Chinappa, the yang to the more introspective yin of Louise Crome.

No guesses needed as to who was wearing black, for Kiwis like to avoid the agonies of matching colours. Chinappa happily did so, electing a white top and lime skirt.

Battle lines were drawn early on, Crome opting for driving mixed with attacking boasts. Her opponent was trying hard to find angles; to stretch Crome at the front and then punch to the back.

As the business end of the first game was reached it looked likely that only a final winner or error would separate the two. Crome reached game ball first, was pegged back with a crunching straight drive, but a tight drop secured a tight game for the top seed.

Would the second maintain the high standard of the first game? Not a bit of it. Chinappa hadn't cleared her head and was not in it at all. Languid nearly to the point of torpor she succumbed quickly via a raft of errors. Yet it was back to business from the initial thrusts of the third game and the fifth seed from Chennai was keeping pace again.

However a few extravagant errors were included with the quality stroke making so 29 year old Crome was just staying ahead. And while Chinappa rallied in both senses of the word to go I front at 6/5, soon Crome had moved up to match ball at 8/6. It was saved with a traffic stroke but another followed. This in turn was saved; and by such a sensational hustle that it precipitated an eruption of fervent appreciation for the Indian.

But having climbed to 7/8 in the next rally, her attempt to level was halted with a tinned drive at the front – a call that she was convinced was wrong. It became third match ball lucky for the Amsterdam based New Zealander when a deft drop died in the next exchange.

The Victory

She was now hailed as the first ever Vietnamese Open winner; it being added to the Finnish Open she had taken exactly a year ago.

Several local players insisted that they would work to get the players back next year, The winner praised the club and the friendliness shown to the group. And when she was interviewed about the match itself she summed it up thus: ‘The first game was crucial. Joshna was hitting great length and putting me in trouble at the back. And although I squeezed it I knew I had to find my own length better’.

‘I'm going to KL in a good frame of mind and will be ready to get going in the tournament there after two days off’, she added.

The runner up also goes to Malaysia, but without an explanation for the abbreviated second game. ‘I started well which was important for me but the second game was kind of mad. I honestly cannot explain what happened in it’ she commented.

‘The third was really close but there was a crucial call at the end which changed things. But I am more confident and fitter now so lets see how the next one goes’.

Because of the buildings laws here which limit ground space, narrow dwellings get up to several storeys. Hanoi is on the rise; and perhaps squash will be too after the first ever international event staged here. All the squash players of Hanoi sincerely hope so.
  

19-Mar-08, Semis:

[1] Louise Crome (Nzl) bt [4] Donna Urquhart (Aus)       9/4, 9/6, 9/3 (41m)
[5] Joshna Chinappa (Ind) bt [6] Dipika Pallikal (Ind)      9/6, 9/7, 9/4 (36m)

Crome & Chinappa
vanquish in Vietnam ...

WISPA reports from Hanoi

Outside the Hanoi Club the calm of activities within contrasted with the pedal power and whizzing bikes; the scrum outside the stalls selling wares and bun cha, the staple of rice vermicelli with barbecued pork and vegetables; and fruit laden bicycles plying their trade.

Inside, the bikes were being powered but not moving around in the gym; the players practising on the courts.

But there was also the opportunity to hit golf balls out from the driving range into the adjacent lake. Cunningly, the balls would float so crash helmeted rowers could easily net them.

Joshna Chinappa & Donna Urquhart tried their hand, and while some shots connected with the centre of a club, both had much more success with finding the sweet spot of their squash racket!

A ding dong final in prospect ...

The first semi-final featured the two top remaining seeds, Louise Crome (1) and Urquhart (4). Both had been comfortable winners in the last eight and came out of the traps fast. Urquhart, a rangy left handed Australian who likes to use her reach and take the ball early. Kiwi Crome is a little more considered, but both durable and doughty. Moving from Auckland to give full time play a shot has found her in Amsterdam under the expert eye of Liz Irving. Urquhart is still to be found in Queensland, but her rate of improvement as she gains experience may demand a rethink soon.

Playing hard, but with excellent spirit, the standing room only crowd of local players and interested onlookers were gasping at the pace. The players were not. Depth and guile were mixed but Crome was just ahead in winners taken and slightly on top with fewer errors made. This gave her the first game, and eventually the second after clawing back Urquhart’s early lead. With the third going much the same way due to Crome’s steadiness the match was lost for the 21 year old Queenslander.

But although the semi finals had not been her desired end point Urquhart was not unhappy generally. "I played quite well in patches, but that was the problem, it was patchy," she smiled. "I started each game well but I wasn't consistent enough. But Louise played really well tonight and had me under a lot of pressure."

When asked by the media about her overall progress she responded, ‘In the last two or three years I have had so many injuries but this year being free of them has made all the difference. I now want to stay like this and keep learning and moving forward’, she added.

As for Crome, whose only WISPA Tour title so far has been the Finnish Open 2007, she was upbeat about her play.

"That was one of the better matches I have played in a little while. Not only is it the first time I have played her, but the first Australian for a while. They hit it hard with intensity; and with Donna I had to keep reminding myself all the way through that she was a left hander. But I knew I really needed to be up for it today as Donna has had some good results recently."

Joshna stamps her Indian authority

Her final opponent turned out to be the senior Indian. Joshna Chinappa has not won on the WISPA Tour but would have a chance now after beating Dipika Pallikal. Both have a similar physique, both have a languid manner, but only one, Chinappa, really fired in the match. Pallikal was slow from the blocks and seemed to realise that success was beyond her despite putting in a good effort and getting fairly close. Afterwards she admitted that her extended win over Elise Ng had affected her.

"I was really sore from yesterday so I couldn't push hard enough. But it was a good week and I hope that it carries on in Malaysia at the next event."

As for the victor, ever the perfectionist she was not entirely content.

"I was happy that I won but I wished I had closed it down earlier while I was leading’. Asked about her preparation Chinappa commented, I started training better so am playing better too. Me and Dipika have amazing sponsors as the Mittal Champions Trust give us support that lets us prepare and travel without worries. I have been training with the Indian Squash Federation myself and they have also helped me out a lot too."

Commercial plugs over, she could look forward to finals day. Not bad from fifth seeding spot.

For the winner new found wealth will beckon as she becomes a millionairess overnight – in Vietnamese Dong! It takes 16,000 of them to match a single US dollar and revaluation doesn't appear to have taken off as a notion. Until it does zeros will be rain down on people from every direction, much as cycles and scooters do in the streets and indeed on the pavements too.

But that is a digression. In the local financial patois, a ding-dong final is quite possible for the inaugural WISPA Vietnam Open.
  


WISPA launches Patrons Club

Club manager Eugene Chng had not been in position when the club had been built in 1997, but when he took it over as part of a new group of owners in 2004 he inherited the two courts.



"I have never played, but I have friends from Singapore where it is a well known sport so I knew about squash," he said.

Bearing in mind that there are only two other courts in the city, and apparently a little dilapidated, he was not surprisingly asked how having the courts of a tiny sport worked for the Hanoi Club. "It is great to have these facilities as they add to the range for our members."

As for the event, he was very upbeat. "It will definitely raise the profile for squash and bring a wider group of members in. It is good to see us and the sport featured in the newspapers too."

He hesitated, grinned and considered for a moment then turned his attention to the start of the semi-finals saying, "I will probably try squash one of these days!"

Vietnam Open 2008
Hanoi Club, Hanoi, 18-20 Mar, $8k
Round One
18 Mar
Quarters
18 Mar
Semis
19 Mar
Final
20 Mar
  [1] Louise Crome (Nzl)
9/3, 9/0, 9/1 (23m)
[7] Josefa Bertilsson (Swe)
[1] Louise Crome

9/4, 9/6, 9/3 (41m)

[4] Donna Urquhart
[1] Louise Crome

18.00

[5] Joshna Chinappa

 
  [4] Donna Urquhart (Aus)
9/0, 9/0, 9/2 (19m)
  Misaki Kobayashi (Jpn)
[8] Mami Nishio (Jpn)
w/o
Misaki Kobayashi (Jpn)
  [6] Dipika Pallikal (Ind)
7/9, 9/1, 9/1, 7/9, 10/8 (65m)
[3] Elise Ng (Hkg)
[6] Dipika Pallikal

9/6, 9/7, 9/4 (36m)


[5] Joshna Chinappa
 
  [5] Joshna Chinappa (Ind)
10/9, 9/7, 7/9, 9/7 (62m)
[2] Line Hansen (Den)
 

 

Quarters complete in Hanoi
WISPA reports ...

The national motto of Vietnam is Independence – Freedom – Happiness; and while all eight quarter finalists in the WISPA Vietnam Open could boast the first two, only the four winners could claim a full house.

As evening approached the mua phun, a local drizzle translated as rain dust, had passed by, and a number of local enthusiasts thronged the two courts of the Hanoi Club to experience their first international squash event in their country. They were disappointed – but only with the outcome of the first match. The enthusiastic applause punctuating play indicated how they revelled in watching players from far afield competing in their country.

Crome copes with 'local'

Of course they had hoped that Josefa Bertilsson would get through, but the Swede who recently came to Hanoi with her family, taken by her father’s work, had a tough task to counter the top seed Louise Crome. The Dutch based New Zealander went through to the last four in straight games as she picked up on any loose shots and errors made under pressure by Bertilsson. But the Swede did pick up points; each loudly and enthusiastically received by the gallery. She buzzed around the court with pace and purpose but too often was enjoying a close acquaintance with the rear corners of the court.

Urquhart advances

Left handed Australian 21 year old fourth seed Donna Urquhart was able to brush off improving 18 year old Japanese Misaki Kobayashi, who bases herself in Malaysia as part of her learning process. Kobayashi had progressed past countrywoman Mami Nishio with a walkover due to Nishio’s damaged knee but it is Urquhart who now has an Oceania challenge against Crome for a final berth.

The buzz around the courts was about the retrieving ability of the visitors, their timing and ability to hit winners. Some denizens also had the mist cleared about the difference between lets and strokes and will agree a result rather than spin a racket to decide the outcome of uncertain decisions during their matches!

Indian delight in bottom half

In the other half of the draw third seed Elise Ng found the first game tough going against Indian number two Dipika Pallikal; though after a 19 minute battle had edged home against the British Junior Open Under 17 champion. But then it got even more difficult as Pallikal found an even more compelling length along with twisting boasts and cross courts. The next two games went to the sixth seed in less time than the first had taken and an upset was on the cards. Ng didn’t seem to be quite at the races; and when she went 7/4 down in the fourth it seemed that the match was over. However, Pallikal does create little streams of errors upon occasion, and did so now. In one hand she was overtaken and the match tied.

It looked like an expensive lapse when the Indian went 5/0 down in the decider, but then she profited from a combination of her strength overhead and Ng laxity. Five all was reached, and then hands and points were exchanged until Ng got to match ball at 8/7 with a drive into a gaping court. But a fortuitous roller saved it and a Pallikal drop brought them level at eight all. By now the audience couldn’t tear their eyes away from the action.

Hands changed eight times at eight all before an attacking boast took Pallikal to match ball and a despairing Ng lunge sent the ball careering into the ceiling. The match was after, the players lauded by the crowd.

After the match Ng revealed that she had felt unwell during stages of the encounter - which went some way to explaining the flow.

"During the second and third everything was moving 30%. My head was strange. In the fourth I tried to rally but I thought I would lose but I got it back again. Before the fifth I took some sugar but this was the first time this has happened to me so I don’t know what it was."

She will see how she feels tomorrow, but the winner had no such worries. When asked what happened when she had stood at 2/1 and 7/4 up she said, "I had lost 3/2 before and maybe that was on my mind. But I had kept the ball in play in the second and third, and as the strategy worked I wanted to do it in the fifth again. I started it badly but she made some mistakes and let me back in."

As for the semis, before she headed towards the showers she expressed a wish, "I hope that Joshna will win there there will definitely be an Indian finalist!"

Joshna Duly Delivers

And lo, it came to Pass. In a match of great intensity, Joshna Chinappa survived a Line Hansen comeback when the second seed both took and squandered opportunities. Having fought back from 7/4 down in the first only to lose, the Dane did the same again in the second. Chinappa was clenching her fist, Hansen bellowing, and the match went into the third. In this game Hansen was in control before nearly allowing the Indian back in. But her first game ball was taken and it seemed likely that she would benefit for her greater experience in the latter stages. But no. Getting riled by refereeing decisions she disagreed with she slumped to 5/0 down……before being let back in by courtesy of winning some extended rallies. More lengthy exchanges, some being replayed after lets, and from six all Chinappa took them all and a notable Indian double against higher seeds.

The team-mates play each other tomorrow, but first would eat together tonight. Chinappa has an unblemished record against her fellow daughter of the city of Chennai, but it will undoubtedly be a spicy Madras mix ...
  


WISPA launches Patrons Club


Crome crowds the
local paparazzi


Josefa with parents
Per & Arlene


Kobayashi reflects


Dipika phones home

 
HELLO FROM HANOI …
WISPA ARRIVES IN VIETNAM

WISPA reports from Vietnam

Just over two centuries ago, 1804 to be exact, King Gia Long requested that his kingdom be called Nam Viet, but was turned down by the Chinese dynasty of the time. So, with a little sleight of hand, Viet Nam it became.

Viet, the largest ethnic group, Nam, meaning South, Vietnam, as the name became joined, affirmed independence from China. Since they, the French and most recently the communists (Cong) have loosened their grip, WISPA has arrived in the capital Hanoi as it begins to take off as a major Asian city.

Hanoi was once named Thang Llong, after a mystical soaring dragon, and soaring is very apt now as the infrastructure is developed apace.

After the bicycle era, the motorcycle has now really taken over, and with more and more cars in evidence too. But it is the ubiquitous motor scooter, along with the hooting, that are the most striking feature of both the centre of Hanoi and the countryside now. They are everywhere, seemingly everybody has one if they have upgraded from their bicycle. Everything from farm produce, industrial materials to the complete contents of homes are precariously loaded upwards and outwards of the chassis as they splutter by!

And with crash helmets becoming compulsory a few months back if anybody ever invites you to buy into a share of a helmet shop bite their arm off. Vietnam is the thirteenth most populous country in the world at a smidgen over 85 million so there are a heck of a lot of scooter drivers! (And if that business opportunity doesn't arrive take a slice of a ‘Limp-in Clinic’ for as the pedestrians weave in the traffic a lot of feet get ridden over!)

The WISPA Vietnam Open is the second WISPA Premiere Series event of the year, following on from January's Hangzhou Open in China. WISPA has brought the prize money that it secured to the superbly appointed Hanoi Club, an oasis of calm amongst Hanoi's bustle. This ‘city’ country club features tennis, swimming pool, gym, golf driving range and two glass backwalled courts.

It is here that top seed Louise Crome from New Zealand, will try to hold off the Danish challenge of Line Hansen, and the rest of the players from the seven countries represented.

Meanwhile, local interest will be on view too as Swede Josefa Bertilsson has been based in Hanoi recently while her father works in the city.

But squash is so embryonic that the country has these two courts and little more than a sprinkling of courts at hotels in Ho Chi Minh (formerly Saigon). There is no squash association yet, but hopefully the initiation of one will be a legacy of the WISPA promotional event in Hanoi.

But first on the eve of proceedings, an opportunity for the players to put on event T-shirts featuring the national flag star, together with nons, the local conical women's headwear.
 


WISPA launches Patrons Club

 

 
 

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