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It's Paderborn and Pontefract
Andy Holland reports

And all of a sudden, the last day was upon us. Would we be playing the Finals on the Glass court? Is it still dripping? If only I had a pound for every time I heard that today!!

Unfortunately we had to move the Women’s final inside, but fortunately we had plenty of seating to accommodate the Ponte fans.

Vanessa Atkinson and Isabelle Stoehr were the first up. A match that many believed would be the decider in the tie, proved to be quite one sided. Vanessa had not really performed to the best of her ability till now, but produced a great display when her team needed it most, with a 3-0 win putting the English girls 1 up.

With a win from Annelize Naude the French ladies could put themselves back in the match. Lauren Siddall, fired up after Vanessa’s win, had other ideas and at 2-2, the match looked as if it could all be decided. Annelize however would not lie down and went from 7-5 down to a take the fifth 11-8. Last on were Becky Botwright and Sonja Pasteris of Italy. With the crowd behind her and some of that free chocolate and a bite from Dave Peck’s sandwich, Becky excited the crowd with a 3-0 win and another title for Pontefract.



By now it had warmed up, the sun came out, we opened the tent, the court dried out and we got plenty of spectators for the men’s final in. A relief after all the time, work and money invested!

Odense were the surprise finalists and Paderborn favourites. After 2 games up in the first match Tim Garner suddenly found himself 10-4 down in the third! As suddenly as Kim found himself up, he had an attack of nerves, suddenly started finding the tin and lost the game 13-11. 3-0 for Tim and 1-0 for Paderborn
A packed tent was then treated to an emphatic display from Ong Beng Hee in the second match. After being 10-6 down in the first game to Azlan Iskandar he did not relinquish a point until he was 4-0 up in the second! The flow continued with Bengy hitting everything and pressurising Azlan to the limit, thus opening up a 2-0 lead for Paderborn and leaving Oliver Post requiring just one game against Michael Hansen for Paderborn to retain the title.

Post duly responded taking the first game 11-6 against Danish veteran Michael Hansen giving the Germans their 5th European Club title.

And so it ends and as I write this most of the players are preparing for the party tonight in the centre of Linz, the Paderborn players are (and here I quote Martin Wren) “in the bar singing for Germany” and I think I might go and join them. Could be a long night!!

Cheers!!



Women's Final:
Pontefract – Hermine 2:1

Vanessa Atkinson – Isabelle Stoehr
     11-6 11-7 11-8
Lauren Siddall – Annelize Naude
     12-10 6-11 6-11 12-10 8-11
Rebecca Botwright – Sonia Pasteris
     11-6 11-7 11-7

3/4 Odense – Fitzwilliam 2:1
5/6 Mulhouse – SAS 2:1
7/8 Can Melich – Espoo 2:1
9/10 Winterthur – Indoor 2:0



Men's Final
Paderborn - Odense 4:0

Ong Beng Hee – Azlan Iskandar
     12-10 11-6 11-6
Simon Roesner – Rasmus Nielsen
     7-11 11-8 11-4
Tim Garner – Kim Poulsen
     11-4 11-6 13-11
Oliver Post – Michael Hansen
     11-6 11-9

3/4 Intersquash – Aberdeen 3:1
5/6 Colets – Fitzwilliam 4:0
7/8 Mikkeli – Can Melich 3:1
9/10 Wohlen – Rotterdam 3:1
11/12 Farao – Neudorf 4:0
13/14 Pueblo – Bratislava 3:1
15/16 Vaduz – Borderline 4:0

Champions through to the finals in Linz ...
Andy Holland reports


Today we have really been treated to some quality squash. There have been long games, great games, some real humdingers and we finally managed to get more play on the glass court, albeit after long discussion with the teams!

There were some battles on court today and the SAS women from Austria proved that they should have been up there contesting the Semi finals, but due to a technicality within the rules, this was not the case and they had to face favourites Pontefract. Emma Beddoes started out with a great 3-2 victory against Vanessa Atkinson putting SAS 1-0 up. After a good fight Lauren Siddall emerged victorious 3-1 against Birgit Coufal and Kirsty McPhee also got through 3-1 against Pamela Pancis giving Ponte a close win.

The men’s match for a place in the semis between Colets and Aberdeen was, as predicted, a tight affair. Daryl Selby once again produced the goods with a 3-1 win over Cameron Pilley and Simon Parke put Aberdeen two up and out of reach, with victory over Scott Handley.

The women’s Semis themselves were pretty straight forward affairs for Hermine and Ponte, winning against Odense and Fitzwilliam respectively, although the Irish girls picked up a win at 2 on the glass court from the one player who initially refused to play on it due to the cold!!



Paderborn sent themselves through to the final, making Intersquash of Sweden their next victims and their final opponents will be the Danes of Odense, with Azlan Iskander at 1, who overcame the Scottish team in another tight affair winning on countback.

So as the second day reaches its climax and we are looking forward to the Finals tomorrow, we also discover that Irish women are not too keen on the cold, that Yorkshire women are keen on free chocolate and that Ong Beng Hee sleeps with his rackets and takes them for breakfast!

Day Two Results

Pool A
Fitzwilliam – Bratislava 4:0
Paderborn – Rotterdam 4:0

1. Paderborn
2. Fitzwilliam
3. Rotterdam
4. Bratislava

Pool B
Farao – Vaduz 4:0
Colets – Aberdeen 2:2

1. Aberdeen
2. Colets
3. Farao
4. Vaduz

Pool C
Odense – Pueblo 4:0
Wohlen – Mikkeli 2:2

1. Odense
2. Mikkeli
3. Wohlen
4. Pueblo Linz

Pool D
Can Melich – Borderline 4:0
Wr. Neudorf – Intersquash 1:3

1. Intersquash
2. Can Melich
3. Wr. Neudorf
4. Borderline

Men
Semifinals
Paderborn – Intersquash 4:0

Ong Beng Hee – Amr Mansi
   11-7 11-3 12-10
Simon Rosner – Badr Aziz
   11-9 11-5 11-6
Tim Garner – Heikki Kononen
   11-8 11-7
Oliver Post – Ahmed Aziz
   11-1 11-6

Aberdeen – Odense 0:4
Daryl Selby – Azlan Iskander
   10-11 7-11 6-11
Simon Parke – Rasmus Nielsen
   11-6 3-11 4-11 4-11
Alister Gorrie – Kim Poulsen
   9-11 11-9 9-11 5-11
Kevin Milne – Michael Hansen
   7-11 9-11

Men 5-8
Fitzwilliam – Can Melich 2:2 (9:5)
Colets – Mikkeli 4:0
Men 9-12
Farao – Wohlen 0:4
Rotterdam – Neudorf 4:0
Men 13-16
Vaduz – Pueblo 1:3
Bratislava – Borderline 4:0

Women playoff 1-6
Pontefract – SAS Vienna 2:1
Hermine – Mulhouse 2:1

Semifinals
Pontefract – Fitzwilliam 2:1

Vanessa Atkinson – Aisling Blake
   12-10 11-6 11-5
Lauren Siddall – Laura Mylotte
   11-1 7-11 6-11 11-4 6-11
Rebecca Botwright – Roisin Brennan 11-5 11-5 11-4

Odense – Hermine 0:3
Line Hansen -.Isabelle Stoehr
   4-11 11-5 8-11 6-11
Anna Forstadius – Annelise Naude
   7-11 6-11 5-11
Anne-Mette Pedersen – Sonia Pasteris 9-11 11-9 6-11

Women 7-10
Indoor – Espoo 0:3
Winterthur – Can Melich 0:3



Favourites consolidate as glass court condensates on day one

Andy Holland reports


Well, the weather remains the same and we were forced to improvise in the morning as the Glass court walls were simply too slippery, making a boast look like anything but what it should have been! And so we moved inside to the warmth and dryness…for at least the first hour. With the wetness outside and the club packed to the walls, the courts inside took on the feeling of an Austrian wine cellar.

You could cool yourself down with the dampness from the walls!!!!! Ironically, by this time the Glass court had dried up nicely, making it the best court to play on! We turned the heating right up and blew out the air conditioners as hard as possible and by early afternoon the problems seem to have dried up….a little!

As for the Squash itself the favourites consolidated their seedings with comfortable wins and the only real shock of the day being the defeat of Colets' Scott Handley, at the hands of young Tomas Toth of Slovakia playing for the Hungarian team Farao. That may have repercussions for the English team who have to ensure that they win tomorrow against a strong Aberdeen side, who boast Daryl Selby and Simon Parke in their line-up, who won their first group matches 4-0.

The women’s event provided no surprises and as expected all the favourites won their opening ties, although Pontefract came through a 2-1 battle against French team Mulhouse, which got their supporters really into the mood for the rest of the weekend.

And so the first day comes to an end. At least the Squash part of it!

Day One Results:

Men Pool A
Rotterdam – Bratislava 4:0
Paderborn – Fitzwilliam (IRL) 4:0
Rotterdam – Fitzwilliam 2:2
Paderborn – Bratislava 4:0

Men Pool B
Colets – Farao (HUN) 3:1
Aberdeen – Vaduz 4:0
Colets – Vaduz 3:1
Aberdeen – Farao 4:0

Men Pool C
Odense – Wohlen (SWI) 4:0
Pueblo (AUT) – Mikkeli (FIN) 1:3
Odense (DEN) – Mikkeli 3:1
Pueblo – Wohlen 1:3
Men Pool D
Neudorf (AUT) – Can Melich (ESP) 4:0
Intersquash (SWE) – Borderline (ITA) 4:0
Intersquash – Can Melich 2:2
Neudorf – Borderline 4:0

Women Pool A
Pontefract – Indoor (BEL) 3:0
Mulhouse (FRA) – Indoor 3:0
Pontefract – Mulhouse 2:1

1. Pontefract
2. Mulhouse
3. Indoor

Women Pool B
Hermine (FRA) – Can Melich 3:0
SAS Vienna – Can Melich 3:0
Hermine – SAS Vienna 2:1

1. Hermine
2. SAS Vienna
3. Can Melich

Women Pool C
Fitzwilliam (IRL) – Espoo (FIN) 2:1
Odense – Winterthur (SWI) 3:0
Fitzwilliam – Winterthur 3:0
Odense - Espoo 3:0


     Official site from Linz

Back To Linz!

The European Clubs return to Linz, where they were played in 2004 although the venue has changed. Once again it’s the usual suspects as favourites: Paderborn and Colets in the men’s event and Pontefract and last years winners, L’Hermine of France in the women’s.

The teams are arriving gradually and we have our first complications! The renovations on the hotel are not finished (they are a month late behind schedule) and …

It’s wet and the Glass court is in a tent outside the club! It’s not raining inside, but the humidity may lead to a slippery floor due to dripping condensation.

We can’t order the weather and at this time of year that is not normal! We were expecting sunshine and shades, but instead we have fog and wellies! Seriously though it’s not that bad and the British players will certainly feel at home. We shall have to wait and see how it is in the morning, so it’s fingers, legs and everything crossed.

This is still the calm before the storm though, so I’m off for a beer. I wonder who I might meet at the Bar?



Official site from Linz

Men's Entries
Pool A Paderborner SC (GER) Didacticum Victoria Squash Rotterdam (NED) Fitzwilliam LTC (IRL) 1. SSK Bratislava (SLK)
Pool B Colets Health & Fitness (ENG) Aberdeen Squash Rackets Club (SCO) Farao Sportegyesulet (HUN) Squash Rackets Club Vaduz (LIE)
Pool C Odense Squash Club (DEN) Pueblo Linz (AUT) Squash Club Wohlen (SWI) Mikkeli Squash Club (FIN)
Pool D USC Wr Neudorf (AUT) Intersquash Club (SWE) Can Melich (ESP) Borderline Squash Team (ITA)
Women's Entries
Pool A Pontefract Squash Club (ENG) Mulhouse Squash Club (FRA) Indoor Squash Club (BEL)
Pool B Squash l'Hermine Rennes (FRA) SAS Wien Energy (AUT) Can Melich (ESP)
Pool C Odense Squash Club (DEN) Fitzwilliam LTC (IRL) Squash Racket Club Winterthur (SWI) Espoo Squash Rackets Club ry (FIN)

SCHEDULE

  
Organisation - well under control ...
 

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