Home
About SRFI
Teams
Draws
Image Gallery
About Chennai
Newsletter
History
Contact Us
   
WMT 2007 in Chennai, India | England wins the 21st ICL World Men's Team Championship 2007
December 18, 2007
December 12, 2007
December 11, 2007
December 10, 2007
December 09, 2007
December 08, 2007
December 07, 2007
December 06, 2007
December 02, 2007
December 01, 2007
November 24, 2007
November 22, 2007
 
Press Release

WORLD SQUASH NEWS

www.worldsquash.org

RESULTS:        ICL World Men's Team Squash Championship, Chennai, India 

Semi-finals (playing order 3-1-2):

[4] AUSTRALIA bt [1] EGYPT 2-1

Cameron Pilley lost to Mohammed Abbas 11-7, 7-11, 4-11, 8-11 (62m)

David Palmer bt Amr Shabana 11-8, 11-6, 6-11, 11-6 (55m)

Stewart Boswell bt Karim Darwish 11-7, 7-11, 11-9, 11-8 (73m)

[2] ENGLAND bt [3] FRANCE 2-1

Peter Barker bt Renan Lavigne 11-6, 11-6, 11-6 (42m)

Nick Matthew bt Gregory Gaultier 11-3, 11-6, 11-4 (41m)

James Willstrop lost to Thierry Lincou 10-11 (0-2), 8-11 (25m)

5th - 8th place play-offs:

[6] CANADA bt [10] INDIA 2-1

Shawn Delierre bt Siddharth Suchde 11-3, 11-10 (3-1), 10-11 (3-5), 11-8 (68m)

Shahier Razik lost to Saurav Ghosal 10-11 (0-2), 11-9, 10-11 (0-2), 11-6, 9-11 (91m)

Matthew Giuffre bt Ritwik Bhattacharya 11-8, 11-6, 6-11, 11-7 (50m)

[5] MALAYSIA bt [8] NETHERLANDS 3-0

Mohd Nafiizwan Adnan bt Tom Hoevenaars 3-11, 11-10 (4-2), 11-4, 8-11, 11-3 (65m)

Mohd Azlan Iskandar bt Laurens Jan Anjema 11-9, 11-8, 11-3 (46m)

Ong Beng Hee bt Dylan Bennett 11-6, 11-10 (2-0) (15m)

9th - 12th place play-offs:

[9] WALES bt [12] SOUTH AFRICA 2-1

Jethro Binns lost to Adrian Hansen 8-11, 11-7, 11-9, 10-11 (1-3), 8-11 (69m)

David Evans bt Jesse Engelbrecht 11-2, 11-10 (4-2), 11-9 (42m)

Rob Sutherland bt Stephen Coppinger 11-7, 11-8, 6-11, 10-11 (2-4), 11-8 (66m)

[7] PAKISTAN bt [11] IRELAND 2-1

Yasir Butt bt Derek Ryan 11-4, 11-4, 8-11, 11-8 (43m)

Aamir Atlas Khan bt Liam Kenny 11-7, 11-9, 11-9 (40m)

Farhan Mehboob lost to John Rooney 11-10 (2-0), 8-11, 10-11 (0-2) (39m)

13th - 16th place play-offs:

[14] USA bt [15] HONG KONG 2-1

Richard Chin lost to Max Lee 2-11, 10-11 (0-2), 3-11 (33m)

Julian Illingworth bt Dick Lau 11-4, 11-9, 11-4 (26m)

Christopher Gordon bt Wai Hang Wong 11-2, 11-3, 11-8 (33m)

[13] NEW ZEALAND bt [16] GERMANY 2-1

Joshua Greenfield bt Johannes Voit 9-11, 11-9, 11-10 (3-1), 7-11, 11-10 (2-0) (58m)

Kashif Shuja lost to Simon Rosner 10-11 (0-2), 9-11, 6-11 (36m)

Campbell Grayson bt Tim Weber 11-10 (3-1), 10-11 (0-2), 11-10 (2-0), 11-4 (63m)

17th - 20th place play-offs:

[17/24] SWEDEN bt [17/24] JAPAN 3-0

Rasmus Hult bt Yuta Fukui 11-4, 11-5, 10-11 (0-2), 11-7 (26m)

Christian Drakenberg bt Jun Matsumoto 6-11, 11-10 (2-0), 11-3, 11-2 (26m)

Badr Abdel Aziz bt Takanori Shimizu 11-4, 9-11, 11-9 (26m)

[17/24] SCOTLAND bt [17/24] SPAIN 2-1

Harry Leitch bt Arturo Santo Tomas 11-2, 11-7, 11-4 (29m)

Alan Clyne bt David Vidal 11-10 (2-0), 11-10 (2-0), 11-8 (46m)

Stuart Crawford lost to Alejandro Garbi Caro 10-11 (3-5), 11-8, 10-11 (0-2) (41m)

21st - 24th place play-offs:

[17/24] FINLAND bt [17/24] AUSTRIA 3-0

Henrik Mustonen bt Andreas Freudensprung 11-5, 11-5, 11-10 (3-1) (28m)

Olli Tuominen bt Aqeel Rehman 9-11, 6-11, 11-7, 11-9, 11-6 (48m)

Matias Tuomi bt Jakob Dirnberger 11-9, 11-7 (20m)

[17/24] KUWAIT bt [17/24] KENYA 3-0

Nasser B Al-Ramzi bt Hartaj Bains 11-8, 11-6, 11-4 (23m)

Bader Al Hussaini bt Hardeep Reel 11-7, 7-11, 11-7, 10-11 (1-3), 11-5 (45m)

Abdullah Almezayen bt Rajdeep Bains 11-4, 11-3 (14m)

25th - 28th place play-offs:

[25/29] BERMUDA bt [25/29] VENEZUELA 2-1

Robert Maycock bt Richard Prieto 11-4, 11-5, 11-9 (19m)

Chase Toogood bt Francisco Valecillo 11-7, 11-7, 11-9 (21m)

Melrindo Caines lost to Juan Pablo Sanchez 5-11, 5-11 (11m)

[25/29] SRI LANKA bt [25/29] RUSSIA 2-1

Anura Hewage bt Valery Litvinko 11-4, 7-11, 11-9, 11-5 (28m)

Saman Thilakaratna lost to Alexei Severinov 9-11, 11-6, 7-11, 11-7, 9-11 (51m)

Navin Samarasinghe bt Sergey Kostrykin 11-10 (3-1), 11-4, 11-10 (4-2) (25m)

Defending Champions England To Face Australia In World Final In India 

England will face Australia in a surprise final of the ICL World Men's Team Squash Championship after title-holders England, the second seeds, romped to victory over European rivals France, the third seeds, and eight times champions Australia upset hot favourites Egypt in today's (Tuesday) semi-finals in the Indian city of Chennai. 

It will be the championships' first Australia/England final since 1991 - and the first meeting between the two mighty squash nations since 2001 when Australia beat England in the semi-finals on home soil en-route to winning the title for the seventh time. 

Top seeds Egypt took the early lead in the first semi-final when third string Mohammed Abbas beat Australia's world championship debutant Cameron Pilley 7-11, 11-7, 11-4, 11-8. 

But experienced number one David Palmer brought Australia back into the tie in powerful style when he beat Egypt's world number one and world champion Amr Shabana 11-8, 11-6, 6-11, 11-6 in 55 minutes. 

The victory not only avenged Palmer's loss to the Egyptian earlier this month in the World Open semi-finals in Bermuda - but it also brought to an end Shabana's remarkable 24-match unbeaten run since October, in which he won four PSA Super Series titles, each of which included wins over the Australian! 

Australia celebrated their victory - and a place in the biennial event's final for the 11th time - when Canberra's world No15 Stewart Boswell beat Karim Darwish, ranked seven places higher, 11-7, 7-11, 11-9, 11-8 in 73 minutes. 

"We had no pressure being No 4 seeds," Palmer told www.squashsite.co.uk later.  "At Bermuda he (Shabana) played well, and I didn't.  Here I played well and he looked tired.  Anyone who has won four titles would be.  I am surprised Egypt used him in every match.  You need a break.  The mental tiredness is terrible - more than physical." 

Later, England produced an impressive performance to beat France 2/1.  Already celebrating a record 14th successive appearance in the event's last four, the three times champions are now looking forward to their third successive final - and their seventh appearance in the climax since making their debut in the championship in 1981. 

Peter Barker, the world No13 from Essex, gave England a decisive lead after the opening rubber, beating France's third string Renan Lavigne 11-6, 11-6, 11-6. 

But it was the England No1 Nick Matthew who played one of the matches of his life to clinch victory for his country.  The 27-year-old from Sheffield crushed France's in-form world No3 Gregory Gaultier, runner-up in the World Open less than two weeks ago, 11-3, 11-6, 11-4. 

It was a stunning performance by US Open champion Matthew, who ended a four-match losing sequence to the Frenchman this year. 

In the final 'dead' rubber between the second strings, Yorkshireman James Willstrop went down 10-11 (0-2), 8-11 to former world champion Thierry Lincou as France gained a consolation win. 

"It was certainly one of the best England performances I have seen," said National Coach David Pearson.  "Peter, who is making his first appearance in a World Team Championship here, played a confident opening match to give us the lead and then Nick attacked right from the start and really didn't give Greg a look in. 

"It was a great performance from Nick, and one which will no doubt give him a lot of confidence in his top string match against Australia's former world champion David Palmer tomorrow," added Pearson. 

In the lower position play-offs, Malaysia beat Netherlands 3/0 and will now take on Canada in the play-off for fifth place.  Victory for Malaysia would be the nation's best finish in 13 appearances in the event since 1979. 

Despite losing 2/1 to Canada today - in which the country's number one Saurav Ghosal beat Canadian top string Shahier Razik in 91 minutes, the longest match of the tournament - hosts India can record their best finish in the event since 1979 if they beat Netherlands in the play-off for 7th place.   

Final:

[4] AUSTRALIA v [2] ENGLAND

   3rd place play-off:

[1] EGYPT v [3] FRANCE

   5th place play-off:

[5] MALAYSIA v [6] CANADA

   7th place play-off:

[8] NETHERLANDS v [10] INDIA

   9th place play-off:

[7] PAKISTAN v [9] WALES

   11th place play-off:

[11] IRELAND v [12] SOUTH AFRICA

   13th place play-off:

[13] NEW ZEALAND v [14] USA

   15th place play-off:

[15] HONG KONG v [16] GERMANY

   17th place play-off:

[17/24] SCOTLAND v [17/24] SWEDEN

   19th place play-off:

[17/24] SPAIN v [17/24] JAPAN

   21st place play-off:

[17/24] FINLAND v [17/24] KUWAIT

   23rd place play-off:

[17/24] AUSTRIA v [17/24] KENYA

   25th place play-off:

[25/29] BERMUDA v [25/29] SRI LANKA

   27th place play-off:

[25/29] RUSSIA v [25/29] VENEZUELA

   29th place play-off:

[25/29] CHINESE TAIPEI bye