News Articles

Brilliant Ashour wins Australian Open
Defending champion Ramy Ashour was at his brilliant best as he downed fellow Egyptian Omar Mosaad in straight games to win his second HI-TEC Australian Open crown in Canberra on Sunday.
David wins second Australian Open crown
Defending champion Nicol David of Malaysia won her second consecutive HI-TEC Australian open when she beat a gallant Laura Massaro in an enthralling women’s final in Canberra’s Royal Theatre on Sunday.
Ashour downs Pilley to make final against Mosaad
Top seeded Egyptian Ramy Ashour booked his place in the final of the HI-TEC Australian Open after overcoming Australian Cameron Pilley in a brilliant men’s semi-final in Canberra on Saturday.
David and Massaro to meet in final
Defending champion Nicol David was back to her imposing best as she defeated 2010 winner Madeline Perry in the semi-finals of the HI-TEC Australian Open in Canberra on Saturday.
Pilley to face Ashour in semi-finals
Cameron Pilley survived his second five-game marathon in succession to defeat Egyptian Omar Abdel Aziz and reach the semi-finals of the HI-TEC Australian Open in Canberra on Friday.
Perry beats Brown to end Australian hopes
Northern Ireland’s Madeline Perry crushed Australian hopes in the women’s quarter-finals at the HI-TEC Australian Open when she defeated Kasey Brown with a ruthless display of attacking squash in Canberra on Friday.
Pilley beats Alexander as Ashour sails on
Big-hitting Cameron Pilley booked a place in the HI-TEC Australian Open quarter-finals when he beat fellow Australian Zac Alexander in a thrilling second round match in Canberra on Thursday.
Urquhart downs Grinham as seeds tumble
Australia’s Donna Urquhart scored one of the best wins of her career to beat fellow countrywoman Rachael Grinham as four of the top eight women’s seeds lost their second round matches at the HI-TEC Australian Open in Canberra on Thursday.

David and Massaro to meet in final

18-Aug-2012 -

Defending champion Nicol David was back to her imposing best as she defeated 2010 winner Madeline Perry in the semi-finals of the HI-TEC Australian Open in Canberra on Saturday.
David beat the Northern Irishwoman in straight games 11-7, 11-4, 11-5 to set up a final against England’s Laura Massaro, who earlier took five games to see off India’s Dipika Pallikal 11-7, 7-11, 13-11, 3-11, 11-9.
The Malaysian superstar was pushed hard in Friday’s quarter-finals by Alison Waters, who exposed some chinks in the world number one’s armour in a thrilling contest.
But she was back to her devastating best against Perry, who admitted later she didn’t have an answer despite going into the semi-final in great form.
“I have to win the rally 10 times to win a point,” Perry said. “I end up trying to hit the ball lower and lower and that’s why I made so many mistakes.
“It’s difficult to know how to win a point when she gets everything back and doesn’t make a lot of errors.”
David’s movement was superb as she chased down everything, never giving Perry an easy point throughout.
“The match yesterday gave me a real motivation for today, to stay focused and stay solid,” David said.
“I was moving well and hitting the ball well so hopefully it will be the same tomorrow.
“A match like yesterday makes you sharper and makes you more aware of what your opponent’s trying to do to you.
“After yesterday I was a bit more prepared for what was coming today.”
Massaro came from 5-9 in the deciding fifth game to beat Pallikal and deny India a first ever finalist in a major tournament.
Pallikal had played superbly to take the fourth game 11-3 and opened a big lead in the fifth before faltering under the pressure of Massaro’s comeback.
After beginning the match strongly, Massaro began to struggle to cope with Pallikal’s deceptiveness at the front of the court.
Pallikal was unlucky to lose the third in a tiebreak then dominated until the late stages of the fifth.
She will be rueing losing a match that even her opponent conceded she should have won.
“At 9-5 down in the fifth I’d just decided I’d lost really and I just wanted to finish well and make the score respectable,” Massaro said.
“She probably thought she had won it, I’ve been there myself – you’ve got such a big lead and you think ‘I’ll win one more point surely’.”
David and Massaro have met on 17 occasions with the Malaysian winning 15 times and Massaro twice.
However, the Englishwoman has pushed David over the past two years, with her two wins coming in major tournaments in 2011, the Malaysian Open and Singapore Masters.
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