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Willstrop at the Wharf
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Malcolm at
the Canary
Wharf Classic ... |
Finals night at Canary Wharf
The
splendid crowds at Canary Wharf all week had been well rewarded by
squash of the highest quality. I have to say that I was concerned
about the final: James Willstrop had not had an easy passage to the
final, Lee Beachill and Nick Matthew had both been in his way, but
John White had had three successive five-setters: Davide Bianchetti,
Alex Gough and in the semi-final Thierry Lincou. For him to front up
again seemed a big ask.
In the event my fears were ungrounded. White began, as he does,
positively and won the first game, which was no big surprise, but
had done sufficient work to make Willstrop feel happy enough.
When the British Champion won the second comfortable he must have
felt he was on his way to a 3/1 victory, but the in-form Aussie
turned Scot was having none of it and served for the third game at
10/7. Willstrop did well to level, served for the game himself, but
in the end lost it 13/11.
The squash was high-quality and fast-paced, as it always is when
these two meet, and although White led 2/1 he was quickly under
pressure in the fourth as his previous efforts caught up with him.
Willstrop won the fourth very easily and from then on never looked
like losing, winning the fifth comfortably to take his second Canary
Wharf title.
The crowd were on their feet, applauding the efforts of both
players, well deserved too.
White can look back with pride on his efforts, especially in the
final, and Willstrop will feel happy to have beaten Beachill,
Matthew and White on successive nights - no mean scalps, those.
I challenge anyone at Canary Wharf to say they didn't get their
money's worth and Willstrop, in his winner's speech, paid tribute to
the crowds, quite rightly too.
So well done to the players and to the organising team of Tim
Garner, Peter Nicol, Alan Thatcher and Angus Kirkland who ran things
so efficiently and unobtrusively. All love the game and that is more
than obvious.
So thanks to the two players, finals night was a great success and
proved a fitting climax to a week of top-class squash entertainment.
There's little wrong with the professional game - the ISS Canary
Wharf Classic was testimony to that. So well done everyone: players,
organisers, crowds and all those concerned who made the event such a
success.
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Thursday, Semi-Finals
After
four excellent quarter-finals the two semi-finals offered no less
and the first of them bettered any previousmatch at Canary Wharf.
John Whitebegan as he invariably doesat full tilt and soon had the
slow-starting Thierry Lincou under pressure. Hitting the ball
sweetly and withconsumate timing he soon went 1-0 up and although
the Frenchman was getting into gear, White did enough in the second
to win in on a tiebreak.
As the whole world knows, 2-0 deficits are hard to recover and it
was much to Lincou's credit that he fought back and, eventually but
never easily, levelled the scores at two-all. It is a great credit
to both players who had had hard matched the previousnight, that
they maintained a fierce pace, invariably a featureof White's game.
At two-all with momentum in his favour Lincou might have been the
likely winner, and when he took a substantial lead with White
looking tired, that seemed to be so.
But White fought back with great courage, reversing rallies which
appeared lost causes, and won a magnificent victory which was a
testimony to bothplayers.
It no doubt soundstrite to say that no-one deserved to lose, but in
this instance it is true.
The crowds at Canary Wharf have been splendid and the players haver
esponded, providing first class matches.
The second semi-final between James Willstrop and Nick Matthew
promised a great deal and the first two games were well-contested,
although Willstrop was always controlling them.
He began well,won the first and led 7/5 in the second. Four errors
took Matthew to 9/7, but when Willstrop won iton a tiebreak the
feeling was that the British Open champion would struggle.
The British Closed champion looked in fine form throughout and
closed the match out, winning the third very easily.
So a repeat of last month's British Championship final between
Willstrop and White. Willstrop won then 3/0 after an entertaining
and high-paced final.
White has had three five-setters in a row and his semi-final was
severe physically. He will do well to recover enough to trouble a
fresher opponent, who looks on top of his game.
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Wednesday, Quarter-Finals:
The
tournament may have lost its top seed in world number one Amr
Shabana, but the full house at Canary Wharf last night were not
short changed in any way.
Nick Matthew, well on his way to recovery after a troublesome
injury, and the improved, fitter, Wael El Hindi opened the evening's
entertainment and for a long time there was little in it. When they
met in the World Championship in Egypt last year El Hindi muscled
out Matthew in an unsatisfactory fifth game.
Moving better these days, he is less of a problem in the movement
stakes, but after three competitive games Matthew drew clear
surprisingly easily in the fourth, winning it 11/1.
He will face James Willstrop in the semi-finals after Willstrop beat
friend and training partner Lee Beachill 3/2 to finally rid himself
of the stigma of never having beaten him.

Willstrop never wins the first game off Beachill, but he did so this
time after establishing an early lead which saw him home 11/9. Aided
by errors, Beachill, showing much of his trademark control and often
attacking with flair, led 2/1. Willstrop went clear in the fourth,
won it, and was always ahead in the fifth, winning it 11/7.
The younger man played with restraint, clearly deciding that this
was his best game plan and it saw him home. Both players struck the
ball well and the match, much appreciated by the crowd, was high
quality.
Thierry Lincou on paper had a simpler task against Adrian Grant and
although he won 3/0,that by no means tells the whole story.
Three tightly-contested games lasted almost 80 minutes and the
squash was always positive and attacking.

The third game went to a tiebreak and Grant had game balls to win
it. He certainly deserved some reward for his efforts and will find
it difficult to believe he lost 3/0.
On the other hand he can be pleased with the way he played, as will
Lincou, who began more quickly than he sometimes does and maintained
pressure throughout.
Lincou will play John White, who survived another five-setter
against evergreen Alex Gough.
By the time the match ended, at just after midnight, these were two
hardened warriors should have already read stories to their children
and been tucked up in bed themselves.

White's resilience will be tested tonight against Lincou, but he
will be fortified by the knowledge that Lincou had no easy passage
himself.
Kickoff at 5.30, final ball struck just after midnight; four
highly-competitive matches of quality - let no-one say they were not
well entertained. The crowd was splendid; vociferous, but
appreciative and gave the players every encouragement.
So what of the semi-finals? Matthew and Willstrop invariable produce
matches of quality, so it would be a surprise if theirs is not only
close, but also worth watching.
Lincou and White provide a contrast of styles and perhaps the
deciding factor will be who recovers best from last night's
exertions.

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David Barry Gallery |
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