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• Cayman Islands Open • 11-17 April 2010 • Grand Cayman •

 
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"The Cayman Open is run by CINSA (Cayman Islands National Squash Association)

 

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14th April, Day Four                                                                Photo Galleries

Down to the Bay ...

It was off to the glass court at Camana Bay tonight, with Cayman's Hon. Premier Bush (centre, on Natalie Grainger's left) declaring the tournament open.

Before that though there were two more first round matches at South Sound, which saw third seed Rachael Grinham safely through while qualifier Sarah Kippax won an entertaining tussle with eighth seed Samantha Teran.

After the opening ceremony at Camana Bay the packed crowd witnessed three matches on the glass court in the warm but windy conditions.

Afternoon Session:

[3] Rachael Grinham (Aus) bt [Q] Manuela Manetta (Ita)
           11/7, 11/4, 11/6 (30m)
[Q] Sarah Kippax (Eng) bt [8] Samantha Teran (Mex)
           11/9, 11/13, 12/10, 7/11, 12/10 (72m)

Evening Session:

[7] Camille Serme (Fra) bt Marlene West (Cay)  
         14/12, 11/4, 11/5 (26m)
[1] Nicol David (Mas) bt Jaclyn Hawkes (Nzl)
          11/3, 11/5, 11/3 (24m)

Cameron Stafford (Cay) bt Anthony Dougall (Jam)
         11/6, 11/9, 14/12 (28m)


Play some Steel Pan music while you read the reports ...

Camille denies Cayman dream ...

"It's great having all the top players here, but we didn't invite you over so that you could beat our players," joked Dan Kneipp to Camille Serme after the French number one had put out Cayman wildcard Marlene West in straight games.

Marlene made the world number 11 work for it though, matching her opponent point for point for most of the first game, then saving three game balls in the first to force extra points. She never quite managed to get one of her own though, and Camille closed it out 14/12, and predictably enough won the next two more comfortably.

"It's my first time on a glass court for about ten years," explained Marlene, "it takes quite a lot of getting used to. On a normal court I'd just try keeping the rallies going, but Camille was putting the ball right in the back corners and it was dying. I enjoyed it though!"

Camille explained her start: "I was a bit nervous, and we were waiting to get on for a long time which didn't help. I'd never seen Marlene play before and to be honest she was better than I thought she'd be!

"Once I got the first game I felt more relaxed, now I need to prepare for what should be a really tough match tomorrow."

Nicol faces down Kiwis ...

You need all the help you can get when you're playing the world champion, world number one and defending Cayman Open champion, but even an on-court Haka in the face of the Malaysian star wasn't enough for Jaclyn Hawkes.

Nicol was Nicol, bouncing around the court, retrieving everything and putting the ball where her opponent least wants it. The Kiwi challenged in patches but it was mostly one way traffic.

"When you come onto court in a setting and in front of a crowd like this you just want to give it your best," said Nicol.

"The Haka was fascinating, I've never seen one close up before, it was exciting and it got me going, to be honest!"
 

Afternoon Session:
Rachael gets a head start ...

The final session of play at South Sound Squash Club saw two contrasting matches as Rachael Grinham did the expected as she beat qualifier Manuela Manetta in straight games, while Samantha Teran and Sarah Kippax treated the crowd to yet another five game thriller, this time the qualifier coming out on top.

In truth Manuela contributed to her own downfall, going 0/6, 0/7 and 0/3 down in the three games, and against someone as experienced and skilful as Rachael, even on these hot bouncy courts, that's a recipe for disaster.

The Italian stuck in, made Rachael work as she pulled back as close as 6/7 in the first and third games, but that was as close as she could get, Rachael pulling clear in both to move into the quarters.

"Manuela's a good athlete, good reach and good racket skills too, so she's always dangerous," admitted Rachael. "I was lucky to get those good starts, although sometimes you're not sure if it's a good thing, you feel under pressure to finish the games off quickly and if they start coming back it can start getting to you.

"We play a few tournaments on hot courts like this these days, so it's not unusual conditions, but I am looking forward to getting on that glass court."

Sarah survives Samantha ...

After a tough qualifying final against Tenille Swartz (it was 'only' 31 minutes but it felt longer and harder than that) Sarah Kippax found herself embroiled in another gruelling encounter, this time against the determined Mexican Samantha Teran, which went the full distance and took over twice as long as her previous match.

Two players not particularly noted for their finishing skill on a hot court, it was as you would imagine it, plenty of hard driving rallies, use of the lofted ball to relieve the pressure, plenty of attacking boasts and plenty of admirable defence.

Not that they weren't attacking, there was plenty of that too, but the conditions precluded too many outright winners in favour of working an opening before applying the finishing touch.

There was never much between then, rarely did one or the other score more than a couple of points in a row. Great for the crowd, not so much so for the players' nerves.

Kippax took the first with two dying drives, Teran saved two games balls at 8/10 before levelling on extra points, Kippax did the same in the third to regain the lead. Samantha was always marginally ahead in the fourth, and led the decider 5/2 and 9/7.

A risky long dropshot into the tin from Sarah brought up match point to the Mexican, who ballooned the ball out of court on the next point. A dropshot from slightly further up the court went in to level matters for the Englishwoman and we were into extra points.

A forehand boast brought up match ball the other way round, and after forcing a weak return out of the back corner Sarah popped in a dropshot which Samantha raced up the court after, but was to her distress denied a let and the upset was complete.

"It's always a tough one against Samantha," said said a relieved winner, "she's so gutsy and picks everything up. At two-one I actually thought it was two-all, it was that tough!

"I'm really pleased, this is the best I've done in a tournament of this level so I'm delighted. I need to work out my tactics against Rachael, she's a very tricky player, but for now I'll just enjoy the win."
  

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