Quarters : Serme sends defending champion King out

Serme Sends Defending Champion King Out of Manchester Open

Top seed Camille Serme has sent defending champion Joelle King out of the 2020 Manchester Open, PSA Silver tournament after claiming a 3-1 victory at the National Squash Centre.

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Serme recovered from three game balls in the opening game to go ahead and, despite squandering a 7-3 lead to drop the second, the World No.3 was outstanding in the final two games to seal a 12-10, 9-11, 11-5, 11-4 victory which will see her take on No.4 seed Hania El Hammamy in the semi-finals.

“I’m very happy to have won, it was a big match and I expected it to be,” said Serme.

“It seemed like there were long rallies and we were both running a lot trying to find our targets at the back and she did really well with her lobbing and having me in the back. I was trying be more in front of her.

“She had a bit of a low in the fourth after serving out and I thought that was my chance and I was happy to win it quite comfortably. In the last game, even though I was quite in front, I was a bit worried that she would come back, so I was trying to really stay focused.”

World No.6 El Hammamy swept aside fellow Egyptian Salma Hany in straight games in just 23 minutes. The 20-year-old will now go head-to-head with Serme in the next instalment of their enthralling rivalry, with the pair winning two apiece in their four battles during the 2019-20 season.

Meanwhile, 2019 runner-up Tesni Evans followed King out of the tournament as she fell to England No.1 Sarah-Jane Perry in straight games. Both players had fought for 3-2 victories in the previous round, but it was Evans who appeared to struggle more with the physicality of the match, with the Welsh player pulling up with an injury at the end of the second game.

She was unable to move properly, and although she put up a strong fight in the third game, it was Perry who secured victory in just over half an hour, setting up a clash with World No.4 Nour El Tayeb in the semi-finals.

“I don’t think that was the best of Tesni today,” Perry said.

“I didn’t want to get dragged into the long up-and-down the backhand exchanges which have been present in some of our previous matches. I tried to just step up and take control, I know I have played well in practice, so I just tried to get that out on court.”

El Tayeb, meanwhile, overcame United States No.1 Amanda Sobhy in straight games.

In the men’s event, World No.2 Ali Farag and World No.4 Tarek Momen saw their title challenges come crashing to a halt following defeats against World No.7 Marwan ElShorbagy and World No.5 Paul Coll, respectively.

ElShorbagy has been something of a bogey player for Farag down the years – winning three of their last five encounters, including the El Gouna International final in 2018 – and came out on top in a scrappy, feisty affair by a 14-12, 11-7, 6-11, 6-11, 11-8 scoreline.

“I expected to win today, but I was very disappointed with the way I played,” said ElShorbagy.

“I need to watch the match again and learn from the mistakes I made. I know the level I could play and I know I could play ten times better than this. I am just happy with the win, but I expected more from myself if I am honest.”

He will play fellow Egyptian Karim Abdel Gawad after he recovered from a game down to defeat Germany’s Simon Rösner.

Meanwhile, Coll avenged his defeat to Momen in the final of November’s men’s PSA World Championship with a 4-11, 11-3, 11-9, 9-11, 11-7 victory.

Momen outclassed Coll in November’s World Championship title decider and followed that up with another 3-0 triumph against the Kiwi at the Troilus Gold Canada Cup three months later. But Coll prevailed in their latest battle and he will line up against World No.1 Mohamed ElShorbagy for a place in the final.

“I’m stoked, I set myself a goal of winning a lot of these ones when we first come back and it was a big one there against Tarek,” said Coll.

“Before the match I was trying to get myself in a good head space with a bit of breathing work to calm me down. I’ve been speaking to my mental coach and we’ve been speaking about playing squash like I play monopoly. I play monopoly very intensely but I also smile a lot, so it’s about trying to get a combination of both and keeping me relaxed.”

ElShorbagy will look to gain his revenge on Coll following the Kiwi’s first ever victory over the Egyptian back in March at the Windy City Open, which was the penultimate men’s PSA World Tour event to take place before the COVID-19 enforced suspension of professional squash.

The No.1 seed overcame Welshman and training partner Joel Makin 11-4, 11-7, 8-11, 11-7 in 69 minutes.

The semi-finals begin tomorrow at 17:00 (GMT+1). Action will be shown live on SQUASHTV (rest of world), Eurosport Player (Europe only) and multiple mainstream broadcasters around the world such as BT Sport and ON Sport.

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