02-Feb, Day TWO:
France stun
second seeds England
as Egypt wrap up semi-final place
Also: France in historic upset
HH reports
Day
two of the inaugural U21 World Cup in Chennai saw the top seeds
in each pool meet, to in all likelihood decide the semi-final
lineups.
First though, it was the lower-seeded teams, who all lost their
first matches yesterday, up against each other.
First
up in Pool A, Australia edged past Germany 2-1 and
in Pool B Hong Kong recorded a similar scoreline against
Malaysia, so barring [more] major upsets on the final day
of pool play the Australians and Germans are set to finish third
in their pools.
The crunch match in Pool B was second seeds England
against France, seeded three, and it was the French who
got off to a flying start as Lucas Serme beat Charles Sharpes in
straight games. Emily Whitlock levelled things up for the
English but Geoffrey Demont took three close games against Ben
Coleman to win it for the French.
So France are all but in the semis, but that leaves England needing to beat Malaysia tomorrow to be sure
of their place in the last four, which would, in all probability, be
against top seeds and hot favourites Egypt.
In the final match of the day Egypt beat hosts India
to guarantee themselves a semi-final spot. India face Australia
tomorrow at the Shopping Mall with the winner progressing to the
semis (probably to face France but let's not get ahead of
ourselves!)Thu 2nd, Day Two:
live results on DRAWS
B: Hong Kong 2-1
Malaysia
Ho Wai Yeung 3-1
Affeeq Abedeeb
11-5, 6-11, 11-9, 11-4 (53m)
Tong Tsz-Wing 3-1 Tan Yan Xin
11-6, 6-11, 11-8, 11-4 (39m)
Wong Chi Him 2-3 Sanjay Singh 11-5,6-11,11-6,10-12,6-11 (60m)
A: Australia 2-1 Germany
Jamie McErvale
1-3 Rudi Rohrmuller 10-12,12-10,3-11,8-11 (62m)
Sarah Cardwell 3-0 Annika Wiese
11-6, 11-7, 11-4 (20m)
Walter Koteka 3-0 Sven Lemmermann
13-11, 11-9, 11-0 (30m)
B: England 1-2 France
Charles Sharpes 0-3 Lucas Serme 8-11,
5-11, 4-11 (36m)
Emily Whitlock 3-0 Cyrielle Peltier
11-4, 11-1, 11-9 (28m)
Ben Coleman 0-3 Geoffrey Demont
8-11, 8-11, 8-11 (58m)
A: Egypt 3-0 India
Marwan
El Shorbagy 3-1 Ravi Dixit 11-7,6-11,11-4,12-10 (44m)
Nour El Sherbini 3-1 Anaka Alankamony 11-6, 11-3, 11-7 (25m)
Karim Abdel Gawad 3-0 Karan Malik 3-11,11-9,11-0,11-3 (31m)
France Shock England
In Historic Upset In Chennai
Howard Harding
reports
France stunned second seeds England in today's
emotionally-charged second qualifying round of the SDAT WSF
Under-21 World Cup in Chennai in only the country's third
ever win over their European cross-Channel rivals in the sport
of Squash.
The third seeds opened up a surprise lead over England when
Lucas Serme, a linguistics student at the University of the
West of England in the UK, beat higher-ranked Englishman
Charles Sharpes 11-8, 11-5, 11-4 in 36 minutes.
The pair met each other regularly on the international junior
circuit, most notably in the 2010 European Junior Championship
semi-finals. But, since leaving their junior days, they have
gone their separate ways - Serme into higher education and
Sharpes onto the professional squash circuit.
"It's a long time since we last played, so I really didn't know
what to expect," said 19-year-old Serme, who manages to combine
his studies with training every day and regular appearances in
PSA events.
Though now ranked 87 in the world, more than 50 places higher
than the Frenchman, Sharpes has been unable to beat his rival
since 2009.
The
hopes of the English camp were lifted shortly afterwards when
17-year-old Emily Whitlock, the reigning European junior
champion, beat France's Cyrielle Peltier 11-4, 11-1, 11-9
to level the tie.
But France fought back when Geoffrey Demont, a
20-year-old from Aix-en-Provence, beat England's second string
Ben Coleman 11-8, 11-8, 11-8 in almost an hour to lead to
the first team upset of the event.
"We are lucky as we have a very strong number one and number
two, with very little between them," said the jubilant French
coach Philippe Signoret. "Geoffrey has improved a lot
over the past five months.
"There is always a great fighting spirit in matches we have
against England - and it's fantastic to have now beaten our
great rivals for only the third time ever!
"It's
great to have won our second tie here - but it's even more
special that it was against England," Signoret continued. "We
will celebrate for about 15 minutes - but then we must focus on
our last pool match tomorrow, the most important match."
France will face Hong Kong, the sixth seeds who emerged
as 2/1 winners over No7 seeds Malaysia in the earlier tie
in Pool B.
Yeung Ho Wai gave Hong Kong the lead after a four-game win over
Affeeq Abedeen Ismail, then Tong Tsz-Wing clinched victory in
another four-game win over Malaysian Tan Yan Xin.
Malaysia took a consolation point when Sanjay Singh twice fought
back from behind to overcome Wong Chi-Him in five games.
"Malaysia is the dominant country in Asia, so it's good to get a
win over them," said Hong Kong team manager Wai Hang Wong.
"The standard there is very high - but our performance showed
that we have the ability to come close to them."
Action in Pool A concluded with favourites Egypt
despatching hosts India 3/0 - but the earlier tie saw an
impressive fightback by Australia to beat Germany 2/1.
Australia were given a jolt when 20-year-old part-timer
Rudi Rohrmuller put Germany into the lead after battling
to a four-game victory in 62 minutes over Queenslander Jamie
McErvale.
Sarah Cardwell, the 20-year-old daughter of Australian legend
Vicki Cardwell, celebrated her maiden appearance in the event in
appropriate style - crushing Germany's Annika Wiese 11-6, 11-7,
11-4 in just 20 minutes to bring the fifth seeds back into
contention.
A commanding performance saw Western Australian Walter Koteka
beat Sven Lemmermann 13-11, 11-9, 11-0 to see Australian through
- much to the delight of the team, and illustrious manager
Rodney Eyles.
"To go 1/0 down in a three-rubber tie is always tough," said the
former world champion afterwards. "But Sarah stamped her
authority on her game and took control - she really put some
good stuff in.
"She's certainly got her mother's genes - she's completely
focussed when you put her in the green and gold!"
Eyles is extremely enthused by the introduction of the U21 team
event:
"It's very significant from Australia's point of view. We've
suffered over the years from the transition from junior to
senior level - but we can now show our youngsters a good
pathway, laying the foundation for the PSA and WSA Tours.
"The WSF have brilliantly orchestrated this and the countries
have really supported it," added Eyles.
"It's exactly what we needed and I think it will really help
inspire our youngsters to take up the game."
As expected, Egypt overwhelmed fourth seeds India - but the
plucky home players, loudly supported by the biggest crowd yet
at the Academy, put in impressive performances to make the
favourites work for their win.
Chennai-based Ravi Dixit took a game from Marwan El Shorbagy and
built up a commanding lead over the world junior champion in the
fourth game. But El Shorbagy, now ranked 33 in the world, upped
the pressure to close out the match 11-7, 6-11, 11-4, 12-10 -
before former world junior champion Nour El Sherbini made sure
of victory after beating Anaka Alankamony 11-6, 11-3, 11-7.
Indian number three Karan Malik took the opening game in the
final match, but Karim Abdel Gawad came back to win 3-11, 11-9,
11-0, 11-3 to keep a clean sheet for the top seeds.
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Draws & Results
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