English Trio Mark Historic 64-Year British Open Milestone
26 Mar 2017
A historic day of semi-final action at the 2017 Allam British Open Squash Championships saw English trio Nick Matthew, Laura Massaro and Sarah-Jane Perry triumph at the Airco Arena in Hull to mark the first time in 64 years that England has provided three finalists in the sport's iconic event.
Matthew, a three-time British Open champion, dethroned defending champion Mohamed Elshorbagy to reach his first PSA World Series final since the US Open in October.
In his first ranking event win over the Egyptian world No.1 in two years, 36-year-old Yorkshireman Matthew fought back from 8-6 and 7-3 down in the opening two games to go 2/0 up - then survived a resurgence from Elshorbagy to seal an 11-8, 11-8, 8-11, 11-5 victory that will see him do battle with two-time winner Gregory Gaultier in the final.
"I was trying not to let the adrenaline get to me, I could feel my heart beating through my head knowing the crowd were cheering," said fourth seed Matthew.
"I felt him wavering at the end which gave me belief. Never mind the world rankings, I'm the world No.1 for my age. The peak is about five years ago, but me and Greg are trying to rip up that rulebook, we are always exchanging text messages saying stuff like 'there is still life in the old dog'.
"I've not been in many World Series finals recently. I know what I need to be doing, but it's not always as easy as that. Once you get to a certain age you know what it looks like, but in many ways that makes it harder to implement."
Matthew's win over Elshorbagy means that the Egyptian will lose his world No.1 ranking next month, dropping to No.3 - with Frenchman Gaultier in pole position to profit.
A win for Gaultier in the final will see the 34-year-old become the oldest ever world No.1 - surpassing Australian Geoff Hunt's 37-year record - while a defeat will instead see Egyptian World Champion Karim Abdel Gawad top the April world list.
Gaultier moved through to the final after last year's runner-up Ramy Ashour retired after the opening game due to a hip injury - the latest problem in a career that has been ravaged by injury over the past three years.
"The last match we played was here last year and we had an unbelievable five games," said Gaultier.
"But I could see in the first game, in the first few points, he was struggling a little bit and he was going for quick points. I just hope it's not too bad because he's been struggling for a while now and hopefully he can play next week in El Gouna."
In the Women's event, Massaro and Perry defeated 2016 winner Nour El Sherbini and five-time champion Nicol David, respectively, to set up the first all-English women's British Open final since Lisa Opie and Sue Wright contested the 1991 climax.
Massaro, the 2013 British Open champion, looked to be heading out of the prestigious World Series tournament after an imperious start from El Sherbini which saw the world No.1 go two games ahead inside 20 minutes.
But Massaro, drawing on the energy of a passionate home crowd, dug in resiliently and swung the momentum of the match on its head to come through by a 5-11, 7-11, 11-5, 11-3, 11-6 scoreline.
"I really wanted to do well this week, especially being at home," said Massaro.
"There was a lot of pressure on me going into that fifth. They say that the home crowd helps and when you're down at the end there, it definitely does."
Perry, meanwhile, reached her first ever World Series final after she defeated David in four games, claiming her second successive win over the Malaysian five-time champion.
"Knowing Laura was waiting in the final for me, it gave me a bit of extra fight actually," conceded Perry, who was less than a year old when Opie and Wright met in the 1991 final.
"There is absolutely no pressure on me, so I'm just going to go out there and try and play well. If that means that I get the win, then I'd love to win my first World Series title at the British Open, that would be really special."