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18 May 2024

Revenge Win Sees Elshorbagy Charge To Channel VAS Title

23 Oct 2017

Top seed Mohamed Elshorbagy defeated world No.5 Ali Farag in the final of the Channel VAS Championships at St George's Hill to avenge the loss to his fellow Egyptian in the climax of last week's US Open in Philadelphia.

The previous chapter of their enthralling rivalry saw Farag get the better of his higher-ranked opponent eight days ago and, despite a gruelling 85-minute semi-final fixture with Peru's Diego Elias in the previous round, Harvard-graduate Farag looked fresh and full of inspiration as he dropped just six points in an opening game win.

But Elshorbagy, who suffered a shock first round defeat at this tournament last year, responded in the second and third games as the Bristol-based Egyptian began to lift the ball more, varying the height and pace of his shots to move Farag around the court, and he was rewarded with a 2/1 lead.

25-year-old Farag dug in in the fourth, however, amassing two game balls - but a fight back from Elshorbagy saw him restore parity to set up a nail-biting tie-break.

There was a touch of fortune about the point that put him match ball up, with a straight drive hitting the join between the right hand wall and the front wall and wrong-footing Farag, but he made no mistake in converting the next point to capture his third PSA World Tour title in his last four events.

"I didn't have a good time here last year and I really wanted to come back and play well and I'm really glad that things went my way," said Elshorbagy, who now boasts 27 Tour titles.

"I would like to pay my respects to Ali, this is our third tournament this year and both of us have made it to three finals now and he's had a great start to the season. The way he played at the US Open last week when he beat me was unbelievable and he did great to come out here and play well every day.

"He beat me last week, I beat him this week, so maybe it's going to be his turn next week [in Qatar] but hopefully we're not going to play again. I thought we played a great match, it was really clean and fair and I'm happy that I was part of that."

Farag said: "Today, the difference is experience. There is a reason why Mohamed was world No.1 for 28 months.

"He knows how to back up those long tournaments and he knows how to push in those crucial moments. The succession of matches finally got to me.

"I'm not used to playing four or five matches in a row at the moment and backing it up the following week. But I'm looking forward to learning, that's what I'm doing at the moment, and I'm excited to learn how to do this in the coming tournaments. He truly deserved it today."