Champion Matthew Grinds Down Golan In Windy City Thriller

29 Feb 2016

Defending champion Nick Matthew was forced to come from two games down and save three match balls in a 109-minute thriller to avoid a shock exit at the hands of Spain's Borja Golan in the second round of the PSA World Series Guggenheim Partners & Equitrust Life Insurance Company Windy City Open at the University Club of Chicago.

The Englishman, who led the duo's head-to-head record 10-0 prior to their Chicago clash, found himself unable to halt the charge of the red-hot Spaniard who produced arguably the best squash of his career to take the first two games courtesy of some wonderfully composed aggressive play that saw him outmuscle and outmanoeuvre the title-holder.

35-year-old three-time World Champion Matthew showed just why he is known as 'The Wolf' however as he mounted an incredible comeback, taking the third and fourth games by the narrowest of margins. The duo then traded points like a pendulum in a nervy fifth game before Matthew saved three consecutive match balls, grasping the match at his first opportunity to come through 10-12, 9-11, 11-3, 13-11, 14-12.

"I feel like a bit like I've won the tournament right now," said Matthew afterwards. "It is mad that that was only a second round match.

"In the first two games, especially the first game, it was the best I've ever seen him play - I don't think I played badly but I was 2/0 down.

"I won here last year and the thought of losing second round was driving me on - I just kept fighting and fighting - sometimes you just have to do whatever you can to win. I went all the way to plan z today!"

Matthew will now line up against Tarek Momen in the last eight after the Egyptian downed Peru's World Junior Champion Diego Elias - while Frenchman Mathieu Castagnet put in a spell-binding performance to secure his quarter-final berth at the expense of Daryl Selby.

After coming from 2/0 down to defeat Ali Farag in his first round encounter, Castagnet came through in more straightforward fashion today, defeating Selby in four games in a match that also saw one of the greatest points in squash history.

Back in the match after taking the third game Selby played all out attack when an amazing turn of events at 7-5 in the fourth game saw Castagnet dive full length in the front left corner to get an implausible retrieval before he somehow managed to recovered to hit a forehand straight winner to the amazement of the crowd.

"It's not been an easy draw for me because Ali and Daryl are such good players," said Castagnet.

"You have to be focused and fight in every rally and that's exactly what I did today so I'm very happy.

"I have no explanation about that shot in the fourth. I love this sport and if I have to dive and push myself to play the shot, I will do whatever I have to to win. That's my personality and my commitment and maybe that's why I'm now a top ten player."

Castagnet faces World Championship runner-up Omar Mosaad in the last eight while in the women's draw defending champion Raneem El Welily secured her place in the quarter-finals after a stuttering display against Hong Kong's Annie Au.

After totally annihilating her first round opponent Coline Aumard for the loss of just seven points, El Welily engaged in an all-out shootout with Au in a match that rarely saw a rally last more than five shots and where her superior shot selection eventually got her out of trouble.

"She played very well and probably the best she has played against me," said El Welily.

"I had to dig in and stay confident and focused as much as possible. It's too early to talk about the final or anything yet, I'm happy to be in the quarters and I'm looking forward to the next match."

El Welily will face dangerous compatriot Nouran Gohar in the next round where ether victor could face an in-form Amanda Sobhy, the American number one who sent out a signal of her intent to her championship rivals as she negotiated a difficult-looking encounter against former World No.4 Joelle King in emphatic fashion, dismissing the New Zealander 3/0 after just 25 minutes.

"Joelle in a very good player and so tough to beat - if you give her any opportunities she takes them," said Sobhy after her first win in five meetings with the Kiwi. "I knew I had to be on it from start to finish and stay focused.

"She loves to hit the ball hard and so do I, so it could have been a hardest hitter competition out there. But I made sure that I mixed up the pace to take her out of her element and I'm really happy to get off in three games."