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Shanghai Worldstars 2004
18-21 November, Shanghai, China,
$43k |
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21-Nov, FINAL:
[2] Cassie Jackman (Eng) bt [7]
Nicol David (Mas)
9/2, 9/3, 9/0 (27m)
Jackman Shines In Shanghai
WISPA reports from China
The stands filled, hundreds milled about close by, and two words were
heard in so many sentences. Bi qiao (pronounced bee schou).
Literally, wall ball, the Mandarin name for squash.
Until recently a sport only known by the few enthusiasts, but now seen on
national TV, heard on radio and read in the written media. The first
Shanghai WISPA WorldStars was certainly doing what the Chinese Squash
Association (CSA) had envisaged.
Building on the highly successful WISPA Promotional Tour to China earlier
in the year, CSA wanted to show top squash in a public environment to keep
tugging at the sleeve of public and governmental attention.
On the Bund, the embankment of the Wang Pu River in central Shanghai, that
has been achieved. The previous day had seen Nicol David cause a
real seeding upset by beating Rachael Grinham, the other half of the
spearheading WISPA Promotional Tour team and current world number one,
while Cassie Jackman had seen off Natalie Grinham to keep both
sisters out of the final.

As Deng Li, the CSA mastermind of the event, settled down to watch
the action he professed himself to be satisfied with all that the
WorldStars had already achieved. "Squash a very young sport here, but now
bi qiao has received some attention in my country. With our partners,
Shanghai Sports Commission and Dragon TV we are very happy with the
progress we have made", he said.
He watched as the players made their entrance into a court that had just
seen a formal lighting ceremony to begin the evening.
Like the previous evening a bright, clear day had given way to crisp dusk.
Like the previous evening, Jackman had literally included a hot drink as
part of her warm up! It was not so much cool as cold outside the court
wall windbreak that enclosed the players.
Although David had notched up a win against her English opponent, that had
come a year ago in the Dutch Open. Since then Jackman has three victories
– the Hong Kong waterfront in the semis of the World Open on the same
court, and twice in the last couple of months at the quarter final stage
of the Bahrain WISPA Classic and Weymuller US Open.
David finds it tough
Last night she had set about Natalie Grinham with the sort of gusto that
normally emerges when she has settled into a match….sometimes as late as
the second game. Here, in front of packed stands and a plethora of TV and
still cameras she began where she had left off the previous night. David
was being sent on visits to every corner before being despatched on a
regular basis then despatched with a volley buried into the forehand side
nick.
Having taken the first Jackman maintained her authority over the nimble
but out manoeuvred Malaysian. Rallies were extended but David could ill
afford even a slightly loose ball as Jackman was punishing and she was
being punished!
The world number two stayed focused and hardly missed a volley. When she
was sent back she had the length and width to thrust the pressure back on
David, or would wind up into a straight low drive that would send the
seventh seed flailing to the front. It was a compelling performance.
To the accompaniment of what appeared to be
an extended signal of salute from a passing large steamer Jackman took the
Shanghai WorldStars title and let loose a media scrum for pictures, TV
shots and interviews.
When peace was eventually resumed after the trophy presentations made by
the Shanghai Sports Commission and CSA the winner explained, "It wasn't
really a lopsided match, I was just able to stay focussed and not let her
in".
For David meanwhile there was the bittersweet feeling of having made her
first WISPA Gold final, but not having been able to really challenge for
the title. "I think I was still overwhelmed from yesterday's game", she
said, referring to her win over world number one Rachael Grinham". "I had
hoped to play as well as yesterday but Cassie didn't let me into the
match".
The week had still been pivotal to the Malaysian's career progress,
another title garnered for Jackman, and very definitely a milestone in the
development of bi qiao in China.
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FINAL:
[2] Cassie Jackman (Eng)bt
[7] Nicol David (Mas)
9/2, 9/3, 9/0 (27m) |





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Shanghai Worldstars 2004
18-21 Nov, Shanghai, $43k |
1st Round
Thu 18th |
Quarters
Fri 19th |
Semis
Sat 20th |
Final
Sun
21st |
[1]
Rachael Grinham (Aus)
9/2 7/9 9/3 9/4 (41m)
Rebecca Chiu (Hkg) |
Rachael Grinham
9/6, 1/9, 9/1, 6/9, 9/7 (81m)
Tania Bailey |
Rachael Grinham
9/7 9/7 3/9 10/8 (47m)
Nicol David |
Nicol David
9/2, 9/3, 9/0 (27m)
Cassie Jackman
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Rebecca
Macree (Eng)
9/1 9/5 9/0 (32m)
[Q] Tania Bailey (Eng) |
[4]
Natalie Grainger (Usa)
9/3 8/10 6/9 10/9 9/3 (54m)
[Q] Madeline Perry (Irl) |
Natalie Grainger
9/6, 9/4, 5/9, 9/6 (43m)
Nicol David |
[7] Nicol
David (Mas)
1/9 9/2 9/3 9/5 (38m)
Jenny Duncalf (Eng) |
Omneya
Abdel Kawy (Egy)
9/7 9/4 9/5 (39m)
[5] Linda Elriani (Eng) |
Omneya Abdel Kawy
9/2, 9/5, 10/8 (28m)
Natalie Grinham |
Natalie Grinham
9/4 9/1 9/2 (33m)
Cassie Jackman |
[Q] Shelley
Kitchen (Nzl)
9/7 5/9 9/4 9/2 (44m)
[3] Natalie Grinham (Aus) |
[Q] Vicky
Botwright (Eng)
9/0 9/4 9/3 (23m)
[6] Fiona Geaves (Eng) |
Vicky Botwright
9/4, 9/0, 9/6 (29m)
Cassie Jackman |
Jenny
Tranfield (Eng)
9/1 9/5 4/9 9/6 (50m)
[2] Cassie Jackman (Eng) |
Qualifying 16/17 Nov:
Finals:
Shelley Kitchen (Nzl) bt Annelize Naude (Ned) 9/1, 2/9, 9/4, 5/9,
9/5 (56min)
Tania Bailey (Eng) bt Christina Mak (Hkg) 9/2, 9/2, 9/1 (29min)
Madeline Perry (Irl) bt Pamela Nimmo (Sco) 9/2, 9/3, 9/3 (27min)
Vicky Botwright (Eng) bt Mami Nishio (Jpn) 9/1, 9/5, 9/1 (22min)
First Round:
Annelize Naude (Ned) bt Chinatsu Matsui (Jpn) 9/2, 9/2, 9/0
Christina Mak (Hkg) bt Luna Peng (Chn) 9/3, 9/4, 9/3
Mami Nishio (Jpn) bt Judy Ding (Chn) 9/2, 9/0, 9/0
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Reports |
20-Nov,
Semis:
Grinhams Sunk In Shanghai
WISPA reports from China
On a clear evening beside the Wang Pu River in central Shanghai real
spectator squash came to China. The semi finals of the Shanghai WorldStars
WISPA Championship were played on the Hong Kong SRA owned transparent
court brought to the city under the auspices of the Shanghai Sports
Commission.
The first thing that was seen was a major upset.
[7] Nicol David (Mas) bt
[1] Rachael Grinham (Aus)
9/7 9/7 3/9 10/8 (47m)
[2] Cassie Jackman (Eng) bt
[3] Natalie Grinham (Aus)
9/4 9/1 9/2 (33m)

David Downs Rachael
Four full stands of spectators on the Bund saw seventh seed Nicol David
start slowly against Rachael Grinham but level at five all as she became
accustomed to the pace – not great – of the court. A light but cold breeze
swirled around the outside, while inside the court a good length was
clearly a pre-requisite to avoid being stranded. Managing to do so led the
Asian champion to an initial game lead in the match.
However, Grinham was not unused to being under pressure, having dropped a
scattering of games this week, including very nearly three against Tania
Bailey in the quarters!
Neon lights on the buildings that make up the ultra modern skyline beamed
out their advertising messages and river freighters boomed their
elephantine horns as David recovered similarly in the second to move from
7/4 down to another 9/7 win with a mixture of anticipation and fewer
errors. She seemed to be reeling in the top seed.
The Grinham error rate was a little too high in the third as lobs spilled
over the line and drops onto the tin at times. But for all the
inconsistency in her play she had been making the Malaysian run and
swirl…and the edge was maybe being taken from her. From a close start the
pattern changed with the Australian taking over the front and counter
dropping to maximum effect. From three all she moved swiftly to game as
David wavered.
So to round four. Both compact battlers were still racing round the
rectangle but Grinham was working positions more and moved into the lead;
but only until a few very much forced errors enabled David to regain the
initiative. So much so that she was poised for victory at 8/5 before
losing hand with a missed forehand drop. A further match ball slipped by
at 8/6 when a David cross court drive didn't clear the tin. Two audacious
Grinham overheads took the game to setting, but one of the longest and
most exciting rallies of the match ended with David putting away a drive
to reach her third match ball. This time the Australian floated a cross
court lob a fraction too high and wide and David was in the final.
David's smile was nearly as wide as the Wang Pu as she excitedly told
local TV reporters that it was the first time that she had beaten her
opponent. "I played a good game and I went for it" she said. Watrerside
locations really suit her as the Malaysian had reached the World Open semi
final a year before at the Hong Kong Harbour.
Grinham was philosophical about the defeat though. "I thought I was
putting in some good drops but she kept getting them back. It was simply
more her day than mine; she played well". With a narrow British Open semi
escape against Vanesa Atkinson and here similarly fraught Shanghai quarter
against Bailey as a backdrop, perhaps a result like this was on the cards.
The Grinham sisters had not played a major WISPA final before, and not
only wasn't it to be here, but Cassie Jackman was blocking the path of
younger sister Natalie's bid to have a family presence at all on the last
day.
Cassie overcomes
cool conditions
Roles were reversed as Rachael combined warming down with supporting
Natalie. But despite a professed dislike of cool conditions Jackman
started fast and kept going at pace. Her driving was ferocious.
Grinham combines being arguably the fastest player on the WISPA Tour with
great tenacity but even she found the Jackman power and control too hot to
handle. Time and again she would waspishly reach a ball at the front only
to end up being driven or lobbed to the back or into a corner from which
there was no escape.
Both the first too games saw some great all court squash but only the
former world number one racking up points. The same was true of the third
as Jackman continued the onslaught. "You are terrible" Grinham shouted to
herself at one point. She wasn't at all, but was playing somebody who was
on fire.
Jackman reached seven in the third without reply, and though a match ball
was saved she was not to be denied for long, courtesy of a wrong footing
drive.
When asked about the match Jackman told journalists "I needed to have a
good length and not give her opportunities. I was happy with my game and
pleased to be in the final".
Since it was the 31 year old English number one who stopped David's
waterfront progress in the semi finals of the World Open last year she
also has a penchant for the location. A favourite for the final, but then
Rachael Grinham was also odds on to reach the last day. Time for the last
leg of the battle on the Bund tomorrow.
19-Nov, Quarters:
Nicol gets Grainger again
WISPA reports from China
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Nicol David at the
moment of triumph |
One year on and the result was the same. Last time it was the second round
of the World Open in Hong Kong, this time the quarter finals of the
Shanghai WorldStars. Nicol David was showing Natalie Grainger
the event door.
Grainger, the fourth seed, started brightly enough but even as the first
game reached its' mid point she was beginning to look listless. Listless
became drained as the match progressed.
David took the first when Grainger hit a loose attempted nick off return
of serve only for it to sit up allowing the Malaysian a simple finish.
The second game was similar as Grainger was competing in waves of rallying
combined with spells of lethargy. Her cheeks were pinked, face stressed
and it was clear that she was off colour.
However, during the third David began to hang back, too tentative and
negative, and allowed her opponent back in. But it was clear that the
Grainger embers would not respond to fanning and the final game resembled
a sinking liner slipping slowly below the surface.
The match ended with Grainger hitting two weak tins and she was completely
submerged.
"I have been carrying something for the last week; not sleeping well and
just feeling tired" Grainger commented. As for David, she now moves onto
the see-through court on the Bund in central Shanghai for the semi finals.
There she will meet Rachael Grinham – the other half of the pairing
that became known to squash enthusiasts as they played exhibitions on the
WISPA Promotional Tour to China in June.
Grinham squeezes past Bailey
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Winning Grinham sisters tell the media the very different stories of
their evening ... |
As she had done the day before, Grinham dropped the second game. Her
opponent Tania Bailey showed just why she was flying much higher in the
rankings before a series of illnesses and injuries in the last couple of
years took their toll. She moved round the court with purpose, countered
with her own fair share of lobs and dinks and became problematic for the
world number one. Grinham ran away with the third much as Bailey had done
in the second, but when it seemed that she might ease through with the
fourth too, instead she found the English challenger reaching 8/4, and
then taking the game on her fifth game ball. From problematic to a serious
difficulty, and one needing Grinham sisterly advice from Natalie who had
finished her match on the adjacent court. Bailey, meanwhile, was being
helped by another quarter finalist, Vicky Botwright as the capacity
Megafit crowd in the bleachers waited and watched.
Bailey moved forward in the fifth with more tight and controlled squash
before Grinham levelled at four all and moved forward to 7/4. But Bailey
then benefited from a lob floated out (symptomatic of the Aussie's
evening), another tickled tin and moved to seven all.
But now, even taking advantage of mistakes wasn't enough as Bailey made a
couple of tired ones of her own to allow the mightily relieved top seed to
squeeze through after 81 increasingly fraught minutes.
Afterwards she admitted that the had been fortunate to escape. "I haven't
played Tania for such a long time and it was uncomfortable not knowing
quite what to expect. I was really hesitant" she explained. "Tania was
playing really well and caught me cold" she added.
Cassie and Natalie take it easy
In the other half of the draw both third placed sister Natalie Grinham
and second seed Cassie Jackman had a good deal less difficulty in
reaching the last four.
Grinham had to deal with another grazed knee acquired from her low level
flying around the court; but although her opponent Omneya Abdel Kawy was
edging back into contention as she recovered to eight all in the third,
she couldn't find a strong enough finish to pick up a game ball and the
Egyptian's Shanghai experience was over.
Jackman also had to deal with an increasingly effective and confident
opponent, but the Vicky Botwright defences couldn't withstand the flow
that Jackman unleashed as she found her feet.
18-Nov, First Round:
Youth Over Experience in Shanghai
WISPA reports from China
The first round of the Shanghai WorldStars women's championship became a
triumph for youth over age for several players competing in the Chinese
Squash Association organised championship.
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Harmony reigns between Vicky Botwright and vanquished
Fiona Geaves after their match |
The All-English quarter
It certainly couldn't be put down to inexperience, but Fiona Geaves
admitted that she had been less than tactically astute in going in short
too early against Vicky Botwright. The sixth seed failed to
establish any regular length against her fellow Englishwoman and paid the
ultimate penalty. With a first round loss in the British Open too, Geaves
is having a difficult autumn her career and this year.
Cassie Jackman, next up for Botwright, took longer to repel the
bustling challenge of Jenny Tranfield than she might have hoped.
Never a fan of cooler conditions which require even more warming of her
back, she found herself under pressure as Tranfield got to grips with the
match and began to stretch the former number one. Tranfield just fell
short of taking the match to a decider at the five court Megafit Club.
Kawy gets it all right
Like Fiona Geaves, her friend and fifth seed Linda Elriani tumbled
out of the championship as she failed to get the better of world junior
champion Omneya Abdel Kawy. "Omneya couldn't do a thing wrong and
every time I tried to get back into it she tried something that came off",
the loser explained. On an unresponsive court leaving Abdel Kawy at the
front was her downfall as she became more and more at odds with herself.
"Hit it up" she shouted at the court lights as another drop at the wrong
time hit the tin.
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Natalie Grinham adjusts the strapping on her grazed
knee to ensure that it continues to prevent blood seeping out.
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The Egyptian now plays third seed Natalie Grinham who found
Shelley Kitchen in the obdurate mood that has been a feature of her
improving year. It started well enough for Grinham as she raced to an 8/1
lead in the first, but then Kiwi Kitchen started to pick up more of the
short stuff and return with interest. It was only after she had got back
to 7/8 before Grinham capitalised on her third game ball by retrieving
three seemingly lost causes – certainly as far as the already applauding
crowd were concerned – and took the rally. A grazed knee requiring
attention during the second took away her edge as she returned with
strapping but enough control to reach the last eight was resumed in the
next two games.
A tale of two Qualifiers ...
In the top half Tania Bailey ensured that seeding supremacy would
not prevail, and Madeline Perry came tantalisingly close to dumping
a second one.
Bailey, unluckily sidelined during the British Open by illness came
roaring back to defeat eighth seed Rebecca Macree to create the
hat-trick of youthful wins. Macree was never at the races, discombobulated
and unable to impose any pattern to the match. She now plays top seed
Rachael Grinham who gave Hong Kong's Rebecca Chiu a chance to
bring the large supportive crowd to life when she snatched the second game
from 7/3 down. It was however only the briefest glimpse of home success as
the Australian resumed the control of the court she had shown in the first
with her varied, floating game; but in a competitive match in which the
home favourite was able to show just why she is well placed within the
world top twenty.
An upset did look possible when Jenny Duncalf cruised to the first
game against seventh seed Nicol David; the Malaysian looking like
she was in another time zone. But she slowly roused herself as the second
unfolded before taking full control of the match with her trademark all
court movement.
Grainger leaves it late
For a short while she looked as if she would be playing Madeline Perry in
the quarters. The Irish champion has been threatening a major scalp for
months now and when she was 2/1 and 7/5 ahead against Natalie Grainger
it seemed that this would be it. Though the fourth seed recovered to 8/7
the game ball was squandered with an injudicious drop. Then it was Perry
who let two match balls slip away by giving away strokes by hitting the
balls past herself after extended rallies. Grainger, meanwhile, only
needed one more chance to snatch the game which she did with a searing
cross court drive.
Perry was not able to deal so effectively with her less error prone
Washington based opponent in the decider and another surprise departure
was averted.
Asked what was going through her head at match ball down Grainger
responded "I thought that I couldn't stay here all week without another
match, all the training and not wanting to phone over the result!"
17-Nov:
Qualification as expected in Shanghai
WISPA reports from China
While the seven and eight seeds faced
an uphill battle in a bid to make the main draw of the inaugural
Shanghai WorldStars, the five and six seeds will have hoped to have a
real shout.
In the end only one of the lower four came close to upsetting the order
at the Megafit Club in the Chinese Squash Association hosted event.
Eighth seed Christina Mak from Hong Kong had neither quite the
pace or tightness to trouble Tania Bailey, now recovered from the
nasal infection that caused her midstream exit from the British Open.
Meanwhile, Mami Nishio from Japan was gamely trying to dent the
composure of Vicky Botwright, but without success.
Watched by two members of the Chinese Olympic Committee who had
travelled from Beijing to watch the play, Shelley Kitchen and
Annelize Naude put on a 56 minute battle. Sixth rated Naude, with
matching orange outfit and hair profited from a couple of Kitchen
periods of inconsistency but although she managed a partial comeback
from 8/1 down in the fifth, it was little more than a delay in the end.
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Hong Kong National Coach Tony Choi (left) explains
the niceties of squash with Mr Hu and WISPA President Natalie
Grainger talks with Ms He. |
Ms He Huixian, Vice President of
the Chinese Olympic Committee appeared enthused by both the play and
Naude's hair colouring! Mr Hu Jianguo, who has tried to play
squash a few times also enjoyed his first exposure to the professional
game.
The final match saw in form Madeline Perry comfortably extinguish
the expected challenge from Pamela Nimmo in their Celtic
match-up. Nimmo was not entirely comfortable with her performance but
knew that the Irish number one is in the best form of her life. Perry
now faces fourth seed Natalie Grainger, while Bailey drew Rebecca
Macree, Kitchen was paired with Natalie Grinham and Botwright is pitted
with Fiona Geaves in the first round tomorrow.
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Deng Li, Deputy General Secretary of
the Chinese Squash Association (2nd
left), addressing a well-attended press
conference on the eve of the event in
Shanghai, featuring more than thirty
journalists and representatives from
three TV channels. Also at the press
conference was WISPA Executive
Director Andrew Shelley (2nd right). |
Squash First For Shanghai
The world's leading women begin the battle to claim the first ever major
squash title on mainland China when the main draw of the Shanghai WISPA
WorldStars gets underway at the Megafit Sports Club in Shanghai on
Thursday after two days of qualifying.
Fresh from her second successive British Open triumph in England ten
days ago, Australia's world No1 Rachael Grinham leads a
star-studded field which features the top women in the world. The later
rounds of the WISPA Gold event will be staged in one of the world's most
spectacular settings - on the all-glass court erected on the city's
stunning Bund waterfront.
The $43,500 event will be hosted by the Shanghai Sports Commission in
conjunction with the Chinese Squash Association. The Shanghai
WorldStars Championship will be shown on television across the world as
part of WISPA's Qatar Airways Grand Prix TV programming.
Grinham is expected to meet England's world No2 Cassie Jackman in
the final on Sunday 21st November - though the Cairo-based Australian is
first likely to face USA's fourth seed Natalie Grainger in the
semi-finals in what would be a repeat of this month's British Open
final.
Grinham's first round opponent will be Rebecca Chiu, the reigning
Asian Games champion from Hong Kong who is certain to be a firm
favourite with the local crowds. Jackman begins her Shanghai campaign
in an all-English clash with Jenny Tranfield, ranked 11 in the
world.
England's Vicky Botwright and New Zealand's Shelley Kitchen,
ranked 12 and 13, respectively, in the world, head a high-quality
qualifying draw for four places in the main draw after Jenny Tranfield
was elevated following the withdrawal of third seed Vanessa Atkinson
with a shoulder injury.
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