The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Top seed Gaultier survives World Open scare

-

DOHA: France's Gregory Gaultier survived a nasty f irst round scare to advance at the World Open squash championsh­ip in Doha on Friday.

No top seed has ever lost in the first round, but when the 31year-old stood 6-6 in the fourth game against Egyptian qualifier Andrew Wagih Shoukry there looked a real possibilit­y it would happen.

Gaultier worked patiently towards safety and to a 6 -11, 9 -11, 11- 6, 11-7, 11- 3 v ictor y in a mature and considered recovery by the man from Aixen-Provence.

Shoukry, one of a record 14 Egyptians in the main draw, played pressure-free and tenaciousl­y excellent squash, but Gaultier's ability to analyse what was happening and to adapt was decisive.

For the first half of the match he had no rhythm, perhaps partly because of a new court on which he had never competed before.

He also had legs which felt "wooden" after three weeks' hard training, he said, and for a while these difficulti­es affected his attitude.

"I had no patience when my shots weren't working," Gaultier admitted. "I had to find patience, and get a few things going. I thought 'just play as i f it 's 0 - 0' at the start of the third game, and once I got on top in the third I thought 'that's it'".

Despite this his opponent managed to come back from a four-point def icit to reach parity in the fourth game, and it required Gaultier to produce three steely-minded, featherlig­ht backhand drops in the top left corner to ease him to relative safety.

Gaultier may also have been nervous at the start of a tournament in which he has lost four times in the final, and which may now be offering him a last chance to f ill the only sig nif icant gap in his trophy cabinet.

True or not, Shoukry sensed an opportunit­y, and responded with passion and sel f-belief, though he claimed to be "tired from the first point".

It was the Egyptian support, he said, which made his fine performanc­e possible. "They made me want it, They made me feel I was playing back home," he said.

Gaultier next plays Mohamed Nafiizwan Adnan of Malaysia, who beat Mazen Hesham, a promising young Egyptian 1311, 11-7 9 -11, 11- 5, and faces a possible last 16 meeting with Omar Mosaad, the ninth-seeded Egyptian, who ended a spirited performanc­e by local wild card Abdulla al Tamimi 11-8, 11-8, 10-12, 11-5.

Gaultier could also have a semi-final meeting with Ramy Ashour, the fourth-seeded twice former World Open champion from Egypt, who saved two game points in the second game against Ivan Yuen, a Malaysian qualifier, to win 11-5, 12-10, 11-5.

Ashour next plays England's Adrian Grant, whose compatriot Nick Matthew starts his World Open title defence Saturday against German quali f ier Raphael Kandra.

World number one Mohamed El Shorbagy of Egypt begins his bid to succeed Matthew against Malaysian qualifier Muhamed Asyraf Asan. - AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia