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| Fri 27th: Day TWO ... Friday is always the busiest day at BSPA events, with two rounds in each of the draws, so we can only give you a taster of some of the matches. For full results, check the draws ROUND TWO The evening session saw both draws whittled down to the last eight, with the men's and women's top four seeds safely through, and 5/8-seeded casualties in each. In the women's event Sarah Bowles and Jenny Wright scored upset victories over Deon Saffery and Fiona Moverley, while in the men's youngsters Chris Simpson and Daryl Selby both triumphed over experienced seeded opponents. Simpson saw off Peter Genever in three and Selby rounding off the evening with an 81-minute marathon five-setter against Stephen Meads. Andy Whipp made it three 5/8 seeds missing from the men's draw with a 3/0 win over Ben Garner. |
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| Men's Round Two |
A fine Finish
After a first rally the "went on forever"
according to one spectator, the second round match between Steve Meads
and Daryl Selby went on to become an enthralling contest, the longest
match of the tournament so far (of course, it just had to be the last match
of the day, didn't it ...). |
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Alex Advances, no sweat for Joey ... 3/4 seeds Joey Barrington and Simon Parke both enjoyed their second straight-game wins of the day, Barrington picking up after a close first game against Scott Handley, and Parke giving a packed crowd on court one half an hour's good entertainment as he displayed all his old speed against Tim Vail. There were many well worked and entertaining rallies, but it seemed that Simon was able to soak up everything that Tim could throw at him. |
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Top Two Through Top
seeds Azlan Iskandar and Alex Gough both made it safely
through to the quarters. Azlan always looked in control against Ricky Davies on the showcourt - "The court is very fast, but a but deader than the other ones, it takes a shot well," - he commented. Meanwhile Gough dropped the third game against Sam Miller but responded to take the fourth comfortably. ![]() |
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Whippy Beats Ben
Again
Andy Whipp told us earlier that he was in good form, beating
virtually everyone put in front of him this season.
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| Women's Round Two |
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Bowles and Wright beat the odds ... In one of two upsets in the women's draw, Northumbria's Sarah Bowles came from two down to beat Pontefract's 5/8 seed Deon Saffery. Having fought her way back into the match, taking the third on a tie-break and the fourth comfortably, Sarah looked in command as she went ahead 7-2 in the decider. But a series of overhead errors, going for the winner too soon and hitting the tin, allowed Deon to level at 7-all. A tight length steadied the ship, taking Sarah to match ball, and an unretrievable drop gave her the win. Jenny Wright made quick work of Fiona Moverley in the other upset. Back after spells in the US and Egypt, Jenny is starting to take her squash seriously again and it seems to be paying dividends. No worries for the top seeds as they all won in straight games. Bowles and Ireland's Laura Mylotte could pose strong challenges to Georgina Stoker and Sarah Kippax in tomorrow morning's quarters, although Wright and Leonie Holt appear to have their work cut out against top seeds Laura Lengthorn and Madeline Perry.
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Men's
Round OneThe men's first round was a full 16 matches, and although some of them were fairly quick and all the seeds won reasonably comfortably, there were a few well-contested matches. It saw the exit of all the Birmingham University boys as Joel Hinds - who found Daryl Selby as good as he predicted, Jaymie Haycocks - down in straight games to Hadrian Stiff - and Steve Coppinger - taking a game off top seed Azlan Iskandar. |
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Scott Handley was one of a group who flew up from 'down South' this
morning, getting the 8am flight to Edinburgh. Waiting to meet him was one of
the University of Birmingham team, Jonny Harford. |
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Women's Round One![]() It was ladies first in the morning, with the top seven seeds receiving byes until this evening's second round. One of the first matches on was France's Laurence Bois against Katie Wilson from Ulster. Laurence was in command from the beginning, able to keep the ball tight, forcing weak returns from Katie which she put away clinically. The
first two games were quick, both 9/0, but Katie competed well in the third,
matching Laurence for pace, and from 5-all pulled away, taking the last two
points on strokes to pull one back.France was back in control in the fourth, and although the rallies were well-contested, it was always Laurence who found the winning position, taking it 9/0 to complete a strange-looking scoreline as she went through to face top seed Madeline Perry this evening. There was success for two locals as Helen Macfie and Louise Philip, both based at Edinburgh SC, won through to the second round. Macfie won three close games against Selina Sinclair, 9/5 9/7 10/8, and Philip, the Scottish number three, recovered from a 10/9 first-game loss against Susannah King to win in four. French interest was doubled as Charlotte Delsinne had a little too much power for England's Jenny Tamblin, winning in three close games. Charlotte now meets second seed Laura Lengthorn.
Quickest win of the round was by Jenny Wright, dropping just a single point as she went through to an interesting-looking meeting with 5/8 seed Fiona Moverley. |
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| QUALIFYING |
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Thu 26th: |
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Preview: |
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