Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Amanda Sobhy becomes first US-born player in history to reach PSA World Championship semis

“The crowd kept pushing me to stay confident and aggressive,” says Sobhy
By SEAN REUTHE – PSA World Tour

Boston’s Amanda Sobhy has become the first US-born player in history to reach the semi-finals of the PSA World Championships presented by the Walter Family following her 3-0 victory over World No.5 Hania El Hammamy under the chandeliers of the University Club of Chicago’s Cathedral Hall earlier today.

The last time the semi-finals of squash’s most prestigious tournament featured a US player was back in 2007 when Natalie Grainger (who reached American citizenship via South Africa and England) reached the last four.

But Sobhy ensured that 14-year wait came to an end with a marvellous 11-3, 11-8, 11-9 victory against an opponent ranked two spots above her on the PSA Women’s World Rankings.

“The crowd kept pushing me,” said Sobhy. “I tried to stay really focused because she is phenomenal in the big points. I knew she would be really good on those big points, so I had to be better. I tried as much as I could to step up, stay confident, stay aggressive in those points, keep pushing the pace and once I won that final shot, all the emotion came out of me, I am very pleased.

“I’ll make sure that I recover well, eat, hydrate and sleep, and then prepare for my match against [Nour El] Sherbini. We played at the Black Ball Open and this season we are at 1-1. I love the energy here, I love competing and I just don’t want it to end, so I will just keep giving it all I have.”

World No. 1 Nour El Sherbini in dominant form during her Quarter Final against Sarah-Jane Perry.

World No.1 El Sherbini, who will be overtaken as the world’s leading female player by Nouran Gohar if she gets beaten by Sobhy, is through to a sixth successive World Championship semi-final after she beat England No.1 Sarah-Jane Perry 11-6, 12-10, 11-2 in 30 minutes.

El Sherbini, who already has four World Championship titles under her belt at the age of 25, is now one win away from becoming the first woman to reach six successive World Championship finals. The only other player to achieve that was six-time World Champion Jahangir Khan, who reached six straight finals in the men’s game between 1981-1986.

“For me, this tournament is very important and once I reach the quarters, I tell myself it is a new tournament and to forget the last few rounds, to start fresh again,” El Sherbini said.

“I wanted to get myself ready and play my game, find my shots in this match and I did that really well. On to the semis now and I will try to focus and going the same way I am. Hopefully, the next two matches, if there are two, will be good.”

World No. 1 Ali Farag celebrates his 3-1 Quarter-Final win versus Diego Elias.

The first two semi-finalists in the men’s event are World No.1 Ali Farag and reigning World Champion Tarek Momen, who will go head-to-head in a repeat of the 2018-19 PSA World Championship final over at Chicago’s Union Station – squash’s first $1 million dollar tournament – which Farag won.

Farag came back from a game down to beat Peru’s Diego Elias by a 7-11, 11-7, 11-9, 11-4 scoreline, while Momen did the same against World No.5 Marwan ElShorbagy, winning 4-11, 11-8, 11-5, 13-11.

“We [Farag and Momen] have gotten closer since Nour [Farag’s wife, El Tayeb] got pregnant,” said Farag.

“We’ve been talking about similar experiences and he’s been giving me advice about how to be a good dad and husband to a mum. You saw how well he played today, he’s so quick to the front two corners and he puts the ball away very well. I’ll have to contain him in the front two corners, and if I’m able to do that I’ll give myself a chance.”

Current World Champion Tarek Momen remains on course to defend his title.

World No.3 Momen said: “It was a rollercoaster-type match. I started the first two or three points really well but I was so confident in my short game that I decided to only play to the front, which didn’t work against Marwan. He just took a step in front of me and won 11 straight points.

“I had to forget about the score, that was the first thing. I had to remember the game plan and just focus on the point I was playing. I think I did that pretty well. I was a bit nervous and edgy but I just tried to think what the right thing to do was, and I managed to get a few of those right.”

The quarter-finals of the PSA World Championships presented by the Walter Family continue tomorrow (July 20) and play starts at 17:00 (GMT-5). Action from the glass court inside Cathedral Hall will be broadcast live on SQUASHTV and the official Facebook page of the PSA World Tour (excluding Europe & Japan).

For more information on the 2020-21 PSA World Championships presented by the Walter Family, visit the tournament website or follow the event on Twitter and Facebook.

Results – Quarter-Finals (Top Half): Men’s 2020-21 PSA World Championships presented by the Walter Family

[1] Ali Farag (EGY) bt [8] Diego Elias (PER) 3-1: 7-11, 11-7, 11-9, 11-4 (60m)

[3] Tarek Momen (EGY) bt [5] Marwan ElShorbagy (EGY) 3-1: 4-11, 11-8, 11-5, 13-11 (50m)

Draw – Men’s Quarter-Finals (Bottom Half): To Be Played July 20th

[4] Paul Coll (NZL) v [6] Karim Abdel Gawad (EGY)

[7] Fares Dessouky (EGY) v [2] Mohamed ElShorbagy (EGY)

Draw – Men’s Semi-Finals (Top Half): To Be Played July 21st

[1] Ali Farag (EGY) v [3] Tarek Momen (EGY)

Results – Quarter-Finals (Top Half): Women’s 2020-21 PSA World Championships presented by the Walter Family

[1] Nour El Sherbini (EGY) bt [6] Sarah-Jane Perry (ENG) 3-0: 11-6, 12-10, 11-2 (30m)

[5] Amanda Sobhy (USA) bt [4] Hania El Hammamy (EGY) 3-0: 11-3, 11-8, 11-9 (41m)

Draw – Women’s Quarter-Finals (Bottom Half): To Be Played July 20th

[3] Camille Serme (FRA) v [8] Salma Hany (EGY)

[7] Joelle King (NZL) v [2] Nouran Gohar (EGY)

Draw – Women’s Semi-Finals (Top Half): To Be Played July 21st

[1] Nour El Sherbini (EGY) v [5] Amanda Sobhy (USA)

Pictures courtesy of  PSA World Tour

 

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