10:09 am
6 May 2024

David Stuns Serme To Seal British Open Semi

25 Mar 2017

Five-time champion Nicol David moved to within one win of an eighth appearance in the final of the Allam British Open after a stunning straight games upset over No.2 seed Camille Serme in the quarter-finals of the PSA World Series event at the Airco Arena in Hull.

The Malaysian, who last won the sport's oldest and most established tournament in 2014, gave a performance reminiscent of the ones she provided with aplomb during her unprecedented nine-year stint at the top of the world rankings between 2006-2015, romping to an 11-6, 11-6, 11-8 victory in 39 minutes to claim her first win over a higher-ranked player since she beat Laura Massaro in the 2015 Hong Kong Open final.

"It's a sheer bonus, having beaten the British Open champion," said the jubilant David after her victory over the 2015 winner from France.

"She's had a really good season, winning several World Series events, so I just went in with nothing to lose," added the 33-year-old, currently ranked a 12-year low seven in the world.

"I went in with my game plan to try and gun down everything I could see, everything paid off and I was really pleased with my performance today.

"I'm just taking every moment as it comes, you don't get these opportunities every day. My body is feeling at the top of its game, so why not have fun out there!"

David will take on England's Sarah-Jane Perry for a place in the final after Perry defeated Australia's world No.18 Donna Urquhart to claim her first ever semi-final berth at the iconic World Series tournament.

Perry, the world No.8, edged the win by an 11-4, 7-11, 13-11, 6-11, 11-4 margin to join compatriot Laura Massaro in the last four.

Perry's win also sees her seal a top eight berth on the Women's PSA Road to Dubai Standings, which means she will join Massaro at the lucrative, season-ending PSA Dubai World Series Finals held at Dubai Opera in June.

"I'm just delighted to be there [in the semi-finals] myself, but Laura being in the other one shows the strength of English squash at the moment," said seventh seed Perry.

"The British Open is pretty much the most prestigious tournament, I've not made a World Series final before, but I've had a lot of firsts this year.

"At the Tournament of Champions, I made my first semi-final, so now I want to push on and show everyone that I'm not just here to make up the numbers, I'm here to try and win these big events."

Massaro earned her place in the semis after an impressive showing from the 33-year-old Lancastrian saw her defeat world No.3 Raneem El Welily to set up a repeat of the most recent PSA Women's World Championship final with defending champion Nour El Sherbini, who despatched England's Emily Whitlock.

"My plan against Raneem is always just to work hard and try not give her too many angles," said Massaro.

"I was pretty livid after the second, [husband and coach] Danny [Massaro] and DP [coach David Pearson] were trying to calm me down. I forgot that I was up so much in the second, but I knew I definitely had a couple of game balls. I was really angry with myself because, playing a player of that level, you just can't let leads slip."

In the Men's draw, three-time winner Nick Matthew ensured that an English trio will compete in the British Open semi-finals for the first time since 2014 after he prevailed in five games against Tarek Momen.

Matthew, the world No.4, relinquished a one-game lead on two occasions to a tenacious Momen, but he pulled through in the decider, prevailing by an 11-9, 10-12, 11-6, 7-11, 11-6 margin to set up the predicted semi-final meeting with defending champion Mohamed Elshorbagy.

"It was like a rollercoaster, he's that type of player you've got to stay consistent against because he's going to have his periods where he plays incredible and then makes mistakes," revealed Matthew.

"Obviously we're very proud to represent England, but every time I step on court I'm representing myself, my family, my club, my city, Yorkshire, England and everything else."

Matthew will reignite his long-term rivalry with Elshorbagy, who took a step closer to retaining his world No.1 status after edging past fellow Egyptian Ali Farag in five games.

Elshorbagy will need to lift a third successive British Open title if he is to stay at the top of the world rankings, but the Bristol-based Egyptian insists that keeping his world No.1 ranking isn't the main priority.

"For me, the rankings don't matter, they're far from my mind right now," he said.

"I've been [World No.1] for the last 28 months, whether I lose it or keep it, I've lived every single second of it and enjoyed every single second of it.

"If I keep it for longer, it's a bonus, if I don't, I've already done it. For me, this is not about keeping the ranking, not about winning the British Open, it's about playing like a winner and that's what I've been doing since I played that fifth game against [Fares] Dessouky [in round one]."

The other man in contention for top spot - France's current world No.3 Gregory Gaultier - moved past Mathieu Castagnet in straight games, with Ramy Ashour his semi-final opponent - a year on from their stunning clash at the 2016 edition of the prestigious tournament.

Ashour went two games down against compatriot Mohamed Abouelghar, the world No.23 who stunned World Champion Karim Abdel Gawad in round two, but fought back to take the next three games without reply.

"He wasn't just playing like any normal day, he wasn't playing like any normal player, he was playing extraordinarily," said Ashour.

"He was slamming every ball in the nick, it takes a lot for someone to take me out of my rhythm and my momentum. He did that in the first two games because first of all, he was playing amazing, but I wasn't on it mentally. I didn't have that explosive edge."