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Karim Gawad and Gregory Gaultier battle through to Swedish semi-finals

Gregory Gaultier hits the deck in his match against Tarek Momen

Tarek Momen misses match ball against Gaultier
By SEAN REUTHE in Linköping

 

The quarter-finals of the 2017 UCS Swedish Open saw just two of the four scheduled matches go ahead as planned, with title holder Karim Abdel Gawad and World No.3 Gregory Gaultier beating Australia’s Cameron Pilley and Egypt’s Tarek Momen, respectively, in Linköping.

Injuries to England’s Daryl Selby and Frenchman Mathieu Castagnet earlier on in the day saw them pull out of their last-eight fixtures with Germany’s Simon Rösner and Scotland’s Alan Clyne – both of whom received walkovers to reach the last four – but the two remaining matches produced a feast of top-class squash action for the full-house crowd.

Gawad and Pilley contested a 99-minute thriller that saw World Champion Gawad – who is aiming for a fourth straight PSA World Tour title – go 2-1 up and match ball up in the fourth game, before the World No.2 was forced off court after a sustaining a head injury during a seemingly innocuous clash with Pilley at the front of the court.

After Gawad returned, Pilley managed to save two further match balls to level the scores, before Gawad finally managed to shake off his tenacious opponent to wrap up an 11-7, 9-11, 11-9, 12-14, 11-6 victory, reaching the last four for the second successive year where he will take on Clyne.

“I went to the ball really quickly, he was going away from the ball really quickly, so it was normal interference,” said Gawad about his injury.

Karim Abdel Gawad lies injured as his opponent Cam Pilley looks on

“Unfortunately, my head hit his back. I was okay, then I walked back and it was very blurry and I couldn’t see very well. I was a little bit dizzy, so I couldn’t stand on my legs.

“But after five or six minutes I was feeling good, I was walking well and seeing well so I went back on court. Sometimes it happens and all you can do is try to regroup and play a normal game. It doesn’t matter if you’re 2-1 up and match ball up. It’s just one game, so in the fifth game you go on and you play like it’s the first game.”

Gaultier, meanwhile, battled back from two games down to defeat Egyptian opposition for the second tournament in a row.

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The ‘French General’, who fell to the same deficit against Fares Dessouky at last month’s Tournament of Champions before coming back to win, was outfought and outclassed in the early stages as an attacking masterclass from Momen saw the Egyptian surge into a two-game lead.

However, Gaultier recovered from his sluggish start to force Momen in an all-out battle for supremacy, with the 34-year-old’s abundance of experience shining through as he claimed a hard-fought 3-11, 7-11, 11-5, 13-11, 11-2 victory to set up a semi-final meeting with Rösner.

“I wasn’t there today, I was really struggling and I couldn’t see the ball,” said Gaultier.

“I was playing the wrong shots, everything was loose. I had to be patient and play the ball into the two back corners until something happened. That paid off at the end.

“In the fifth game I was playing point by point, I wasn’t thinking too far ahead, I was just focusing on each shot. As long as your head is still there, you keep fighting to the last point.”

2017 UCS Swedish Open, Linköping, Sweden.

Results – Quarter-Finals:
[1] Karim Abdel Gawad (EGY) bt [6] Cameron Pilley (AUS) 3-2: 11-7, 9-11, 11-9, 12-14, 11-6 (99m)
Alan Clyne (SCO) bt [3] Mathieu Castagnet (FRA) w/o
[4] Simon Rösner (GER) bt [8] Daryl Selby (ENG) w/o
[2] Gregory Gaultier (FRA) bt [5] Tarek Momen (EGY) 3-2: 3-11, 7-11, 11-5, 13-11, 11-2 (78m)

Semi-Finals (To Be Played February 4th):
[1] Karim Abdel Gawad (EGY) v Alan Clyne (SCO)
[4] Simon Rösner (GER) v [2] Gregory Gaultier (FRA)
  

Pictures by STEVE LINE (www.squashpics.com)

 

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