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14-Aug, FINAL:
 
[3] Simon Carruthers bt [Q] Chris Ryder
        11/6, 11/3, 11/10 (2-0)

Carruthers Cleans Up
in Auckland ...

Australia's Simon Carruthers collected his second PSA title in a week as he ended the run of English qualifier Chris Ryder in the final of the Royal Oak Open in Auckland.

North Island 2005 

Waikato Open
July 27-29

Auckland Open
August 05-07

Royal Oak Open
August 11-14

  

Photos by Dan Zilic
 
Draw & Results

Royal Oak Roundup
by Daniel Zilic

Simon Carruthers bt Chris Ryder  3/0

Carruthers Collects Another

The men's final saw Carruthers winning yet another New Zealand title after winning in Remuera last week.

Ryder looked a bit tired right from the start, whereas Carruthers was his usual smooth moving and great retrieving self.

Despite some long rallies Carruthers seemed to have the edge and just be that much sharper than his 24-year old opponent Ryder, who towards the end of the second game was going in short very early in the rallies and was looking pretty desperate.

The third game saw Chris stepping up and rallying far better, making Simon work very hard for his points. Chris was 10/9 up and it seemed like the tide was turning, but Carruthers showed just why he is so hard to beat at the moment, and ground home victory 12/10 in the third.

 
"This is great, especially winning in three. Towards the end I was made to do a lot of work and I think if I would have lost that third I would have taken a rest in the fourth.

"That was my tenth match in two tournaments and I am prepared for a long rest now once I am back in Australia.

"This New Zealand trip was just great for me, especially winning a Super Satellite Tournament. I will be flying up the rankings into a low seventy or high sixties position, which will enable me to make the main draw in bigger tournaments.

"My next plan, after resting, is to go to England for a bit and live over there. Once I have sorted a league team out over there, I will be over in no time."

Simon Carruthers


Barnett encourages Ryder

"I don't really know what the big difference was between the two of us today. I guess he was just that bit sharper than me. I was just too tired and couldn't get myself pumped up in games one and two.

"I came out really determined in game three and started dominating the rallies, which he had been doing earlier on. I feel that if I could have sneaked that third game it might have gone to five, but it was just not to be.

"All in all I am very happy with the whole New Zealand trip. Getting back into a PSA final is a great feeling, especially after being ill for a long time. I suffered from a fatigue syndrome for several years and thought I would never play squash again to that level, but now I am back and am strong enough to beat PSA top 100 players and get into the finals.

"It is obviously great getting some well-needed ranking points, but more importantly it has really boosted my confidence."

Chris Ryder
Kitchen's Long Weekend

Shelley Kitchen bt Louise Crome  
    9/1, 9/1, 9/2

Shelley managed to beat Louise Crome fairly comfortably in three games today in the women's final. She played the men's tournament (the non-PSA) and reached the finals there too, so she has had her work cut out for her this weekend.
 
"I played quite well today but playing Shelley is very hard. She puts you under so much pressure and hits the ball very hard. She is playing well at the moment and is very sharp on court.

"I am still off work until the Nationals, so I can concentrate on my squash for the time being. After that I am back to work full-time again though."

Louise Crome
"I play the men's events too so I get some really hard matches in these tournaments.

"Against Louise I was starting to get tired towards the end of the third game, so I just tried to get on top of her and finish it before she could take advantage of it.

"I am staying here in New Zealand for the time being as we have the National Championships coming up in three weeks.

"After that I will be heading off to Seattle, the next stop on the WISPA tour."

Shelley Kitchen
So, that's all. We would like to thank John Endean for putting on the tournament and taking care of us, it has been a good couple of weeks over here.

Most players are flying back home tomorrow, a couple are off to Papua New Guinea and some, well only me, are touring round New Zealand for a bit.

Cheers,
Daniel Zilic
Semi-Finals:
 
[3] Simon Carruthers bt [1] Kashif Shuja      11/3, 3/11, 11/7, 11/10

  [Q] Chris Ryder  bt [14] Luke Margan            11/6, 9/11, 11/10, 11/9

CARRUTHERS IN 8 DAYS, FOUR YEARS FOR RYDER ...

The final of the Royal Oak Open will feature Australian third seed Simon Carruthers, playing his second final in eight days, and English qualifier Chris Ryder, who, after a three year break for University studies, last played a final in the Alcatraz Open in 2001.

[3] Simon Carruthers bt [1] Kashif Shuja
      3/1


Carruthers conquers
Kashif again  ...


The Carruthers v Shuja match was, as expected, pretty brutal for both. The two players put in a tremendous effort and both looked absolutely drained towards the end.

It was exciting squash and it looked as if Kashif, despite starting terribly, could sneak the fourth game, but Carruthers showed just how tough to beat he is right now by retrieving every shot and slotting a couple of winners himself.

Full credit to Kashif though, who had the crowd behind him and played very well.
 
"I am well and truly knackered. It was just so hard and I am so happy I could close it down in four.

"Kashif started terribly, hitting errors off every shot, but I retaliated by doing the same in the second. You know, once you reach a certain level of exhaustion you just have to push through the pain barrier and I was just about able to do that. But now I really need a rest.

"I am happy to play Chris tomorrow. It looks like he has a very strong game, especially at the front of the court, and I am ready just to push myself for one final match."


Simon Carruthers
Ryder finally reaches
another final ...


Chris Ryder  bt [14] Luke Margan
   3/0

It was rather niggly to start off with since both players were asking for a lot of lets. So there was heaps of discussion with the referee, to whose decisions both players objected regularly.

Margan seemed very nervous at first but settled down and displayed some fast and furious squash, whereas Ryder showed some great skill and shot selection.

The third was once again the deciding game and was very close, but Ryder was able to edge it. Both players were getting desperate in the fourth and retrieved awesomely, but Ryder ultimately prevailed.
"It is so great to be in a PSA final again. Not that I am looking forward to it physically, because I am just absolutely shattered after that game. I guess Simon is too, so it could be a shotplayer's final tomorrow.

"In my match it seemed like whoever was able to step up just a bit more would win the game, and I think I was able to just do that.

"It was very close and we were both tired and not clearing the balls very well, which created a lot of interference on both sides. It was still a good match and I'm very confident in my game at the moment."


Chris Ryder
      That is all for now. The non-finalists, which includes me, are off to watch the
      rugby and head off to Auckland afterwards ...
                                                                                     
 Daniel Zilic
Quarter-Finals
 
  [1] Kashif Shuja bt [5] David Barnett            11/8, 10/11, 11/6, 11/9
  [3] Simon Carruthers bt Chris Simpson       
9/11, 11/4, 11/9, 11/2
  [14] Luke Margan bt [4] Bader Al Hussaini   
11/9, 10/11, 11/3, 11/6
  [Q] Chris Ryder bt [7] Robin Clarke             
11/9, 11/1, 11/3
Carruthers rolls into semis

 Simon Carruthers bt Chris Simpson  3/1

I missed out on most of the first quarterfinals but was able to watch the third and fourth game between Simon Carruthers and Chris Simpson. The third game was really, really tough squash between the two and both were working hard.

Simpson could not capitalise on a 9/8 lead and went for some pretty risky shots towards the end, which unfortunately for him did not pay off. The fourth was clear cut and Carruthers seemed to be relieved getting this one home in 47 minutes.
 
"It was a good match and I am disappointed to lose the vital third game after being 9/8 up on him. At times I ended up just running everything down
instead of imposing my own game.

"I feel that I have learned a lot from this game, more so than from any other match I have played over here in NZ. I didn't think there was much I could learn or change about my game, but this match has shown me that there is."

Chris Simpson 
"Oh man, I am really tired now. It was a really hard match. The first two games were extremely tough and I think we both knew that whoever won the third was going to win the match.

"I didn't really know Chris before New Zealand but the guys told me about him and that he is England's number one junior, so I thought he would be pretty good.

"The last tournaments and games are slowly taking their toll and I am beginning to feel tired. I have played eight matches in the last nine days so it is hard to keep going.

"Against Kashif however I feel like I have the edge right now, although having home support, especially if it is as strong as it was in Remuera, does not help the cause. I will try and up the pace, make him work hard. He hasn't been liking that in the past so it will hopefully work for me tonight."

Simon Carruthers

Shuja still on course

Kashif Shuja
bt David Barnett  3/1


Carruthers will meet top seed Khasif Shuja for their second Trans-Tasman semi-final in consecutive tournaments.


Shuja beat David Barnett in four games and 38 minutes, although the New Zealand number one Shuja did seem a little tired towards the end.
"I played really well. I was getting loads of balls back he didn't expect me to. I had a good chance today especially being 8/4 up in the fourth, but he kind of lulled me in and won 11/9.

"All in all my results over here have been pretty steady. I have played to my ranking every time and lost to strong players, who made at least the semis in each event."

David Barnett 
Ryder on Fire

   Chris Ryder bt Robin Clarke   3/0

Chris Ryder
was again on fire playing against Robin Clarke. Clarke got off to a good start, hitting some nice winners and going up 9/4.

Bryan Byrne who was watching from the beginning said I just missed the best drop he had ever seen played by Clarke, so I thought Chris would be in for a hard time.

Chris amazingly reeled off 17 points in a row after that and went from 4/9 in the first straight to 10/0 in the second. He was in total control and won the match comfortably. Robin did not seem happy about his game today, but Ryder just seemed a bit too sharp in the 28 minute match.

This will be Ryder's first PSA semi final in four years, due to a break while at University. His last outing to the final stages of an event was in December 2001 when he won the Alcatraz Open title in Switzerland.
    
"I stepped up the court a bit after going 4/9 down in the first and from then on it just all clicked.

"I was rather annoyed until then because he hit some good winners and got some lucky bounces to go up to 9/4. We had a brand new ball to start off and it went off like a rocket. Once it slowed down things started going my way.

"I don't think Robin played his best today and did not make best use of his height advantage, but he is only young and I am sure it will be tougher next time around."

Chris Ryder 
Margan makes
the last four

Luke Margan bt Bader Al Hussaini 3/0 

Luke is very bouncy and fired up on court and started off in that style.

Except for the second game he seemed to be in control and showed some great athleticism and volleying.

Not that Bader played badly, but Luke just seemed to be a bit sharper.

He finished off the match with a spectacular cross court volley nick jumping of the T, which even Bader applauded.


the Poker Party

"I was nervous to start off with but it got better once I won the first, I
started to relax and feel better.

"In the second I started playing his game, floating the ball around, which did not really work out for me. That was the kind of game which won him two games last time we played, so in the third I
tried to up the pace, put him under pressure and chopping it in short whenever possible. He didn't like that.

"The last shot of the match was great. Up until my back injury two years ago I never really went for nicks, but now I try and take the opportunity when it arises. I had a bad back injury which forced me to retire for a year.

"Then I started to see the same physio as Stewart Boswell, and since then things are way better. I will probably move back to Brisbane and play and train in the Australian Institute of Sports. Currently I am living back in Adelaide, but I do not get enough hard matches there.

"I have not seen Chris Ryder play yet but he seems to be playing very well at the moment. A good start will be vital so I will try and grind out the first game and put him under pressure right from the start."

Luke Margan 
Crome takes on Shelley ...

That is all from the quarters. In the women's event I saw Louise Crome beating Jackie Hawkes 10/8 in the fifth, which was pretty good squash and quite exciting.

She is playing Shelley Kitchen in tomorrow's final.

I managed to talk to Louise, who is 27 years old and very nice, so here we go:
 
"Jackie and I play loads against each other, as we both play at the same club. Its probably 50-50 between us, so after two losses in a row I was happy winning today, especially after being 2/1 down.

"I played well today and am looking forward to playing Shelley tomorrow, as we haven't played in about a year.

"I am not playing full-time at the moment, I have a job at Air New Zealand right now. I have gone full-time in the past, but got a bad wrist injury after six months which forced me to retire for a while.

"Right now I have taken a couple of weeks off work to play a couple of tournaments. I played in Hong Kong and the South Australian Open before playing here. I am pleased to have done so and despite being the underdog in tomorrow's final, I will give it my best shot."

Louise Crome 


Poker Party rages on as Gaskin serves an Ace ...

Poker has been going good, but Arthur Gaskin and Simon Carruthers split the pot.

Irishman Gaskin entered the Tennis Doubles competition which is going on at the club with his billet.

Despite being distracted by some pretty Tennis ladies on the next-door court, he managed to beat a couple of older guys in convincing style.

He was receiving a lot of cheers by most of the squash players, who applauded his every shot.
  
ROYAL OAK ROUNDUP  Qualifying & Day one reports from Daniel ...
Royal Oak Open 2005
New Zealand, 11-14 Aug, $3k
Round One/Two
Aug 12
Quarters
Aug 13
Semis
Aug 13
Final
Aug 14
[1] Kashif Shujah (Nzl)
8/11 11/8 11/8 11/7
[16] Ali Alramezi (Kuw)
Kashif Shujah
11/8, 10/11, 11/6, 11/9
David Barnett
Kashif Shujah

11/3, 3/11, 11/7, 11/10

Simon Carruthers
Simon Carruthers


11/6, 11/3, 11/10 (2-0)


Chris Ryder
[5] David Barnett (Eng)
11/4 6/11 8/11 11/5 11/2
 Robbie Temple (Eng)
[3] Simon Carruthers (Aus)
11/4 11/5 7/11 11/5
[13] Scott Arnold (Aus)
Simon Carruthers
9/11, 11/4, 11/9, 11/2
Chris Simpson
 [Q] Chris Simpson (Eng)
11/2 8/11 11/6 11/8
[15] Sam Atkins (Nzl)
[14] Luke Margan (Aus)
11/10 (2-0) 11/3 10/11 (2-0) 11/7
[6] Campbell Grayson (Nzl)
Luke Margan
11/9, 10/11, 11/3, 11/6
Bader Al Hussaini
Luke Margan

11/6, 9/11, 11/10, 11/9

Chris Ryder
[11] Josh Greenfield (Nzl)
9/11 11/5 10/11(2-0) 11/4 11/7
[4] Bader Al Hussaini (Kuw)
[12] Mohammed Hajeyah (Kuw)
11/8 11/10(2-0) 11/6
[7] Robin Clarke (Can)
Robin Clarke
11/9, 11/1, 11/3
Chris Ryder
[10] Martin Knight (Nzl)
11/4 11/7 11/8
 [Q] Chris Ryder (Eng)

Round One:
1. Kashif Shuja (Nzl) bt Q. Chris Lloyd (Nzl)                         11/3 11/6 11/4
16. Ali Alramezi (Kuw) bt Q. Rik Smet (Bel)                          11/9 8/11 11/8 11/9
5. David Barnett (Eng) bt Michael Elford (Eng)                      11/5 11/5 11/5
Robbie Temple (Eng) bt 9. Arthur Gaskin (Irl)                       11/6 6/11 11/5 11/2
3. Simon Carruthers (Aus) bt Q. Paul Tuffin (Nzl)                  11/2 11/7 11/2
13. Scott Arnold (Aus) bt Q. Yasunori Ishiwata (Jpn)              11/6 11/6 11/9
Chris Simpson (Eng) bt 8. Nasser B Al-Ramzi (Kuw)              8/11 11/10(2-0) 11/2 11/4
15. Sam Atkins (Nzl) bt Q. Mike Weston (Nzl)                        9/11 7/11 11/5 11/8 11/5
14. Luke Margan (Aus) bt Brian Byrne (Irl)                           11/5 10/12 11/5 11/8
6. Campbell Grayson (Nzl) bt Daniel Zilic (Ger)                     11/10(3-1) 11/2 11/5
11. Josh Greenfield (Nzl) bt Harinder Pal Sandhu (Ind)           11/7 8/11 3/11 12/10 11/4
4. Bader Al Hussaini (Kuw) bt Nick Smith (Aus)                     11/7 11/9 11/7
12. Mohammed Hajeyah (Kuw) bt Q. Stuart Crawford (Sco)   5/11 10/11(2-0) 11/4 11/9 11/9
7. Robin Clarke (Can) bt Graeme Wilson (Nzl)                      11/0 11/0 11/0
10. Martin Knight (Nzl) bt Parthiban Ayappan (Ind)                11/5 11/5 11/8
Chris Ryder (Eng) bt 2. Abdullah Almezayen (Kuw)               9/11 11/6 11/10(2-0) 11/7

 Qualifying  
 

Rik Smet (Bel)                                             BYE
Chris Ryder (Eng) bt Josh Thom (Nzl)             11/6, 11/0, 11/5
Chris Lloyd (Nzl) bt Stephen Preefer (USA)     11/10, 11/2, 11/3
Mike Weston (Nzl) bt Chris McEldowney (Nzl)  11/7, 11/8, 11/7
Paul Tuffin (Nzl) bt Brent Lewis (Nzl)               11/5, 11/8, 11/10
Stuart Crawford (Sco) bt Michael Bill (Nzl)       11/6, 11/3, 11/5
Chris Simpson (Eng) bt Nigel Lloyd (Nzl)         11/4, 11/6, 11/3
Yasunori Ishiwata (Jpn)                                 BYE

12-Aug
Royal Oak Roundup
from Daniel Zilic

A very busy first day today in the Royal Oak Squash Club in Auckland for all but Robin Clark, whose first round opponent Graeme Wilson turned up late for his match, so Robin received a bye.

Chris Simpson ...Chris Simpson had a bit of a fright in the first round finding himself 0/1 and 7/10 down to Kuwaiti Al-Ramzi, but he showed he is yet another tough Englishman winning the second in a tie-break and conceding only four or five points in the last two games.

I have to say that his game improved a hundred percent after some coaching by Robin "the self proclaimed master-coach" Clarke.

The only major first round upset came, as predicted by many, from Chris Ryder. He beat Almezayen in four.

One has to say that this young Kuwaiti fellow is probably one of the quickest players on the circuit and hits the most random shots at times. He certainly loves big crosscourt drops, which found the nick quite regularly. Chris, no slow man himself on the court, was very happy to get home in four anyway.

Apart from that Stuart Crawford was close to upsetting Hajeyah but the Kuwaiti closed down on a two game deficit with some good racket skills.

Second Round

Kashif ShujaIn the second round Kashif was smooth as ever just about doing enough to win in four and Dave Barnett worked hard to beat Robbie Temple in five games. Both had their bump-ins with the referee throughout the sixty minute match.

Simon Carruthers is the man of the moment and high on confidence putting on a good display against up and coming Aussie Scott Arnold. Thankfully Simon has not displayed the same skill playing poker, but there are still a couple of hands to be played. He is playing Simpson tomorrow, who overcame a spirited challenge from Kiwi Sam Atkins.

Bader Al HussainiLuke Margan could afford to miss out on three matchballs in the third against local boy Campbell Grayson, but finished him off in the fourth. His match against sole surviving Kuwaiti Bader Al Hussaini promises to be a tough match, after Margan managed to beat him in five games when they played in Auckland last weekend.

Chris Ryder finished off the evening with some great squash against Martin Knight. Despite Glen Wilson being in Knight's corner, Ryder was just a bit too good on the day I would say. Ryder is playing Robin Clarke for a place in the semis tomorrow.


                     Clarke beats Hajeyah

Not much else going on otherwise. Still spending our time playing poker, pool, and talking about the cricket, which I am slowly getting the hang of. You see, it isn't really that popular in Germany ...

More news tomorrow hopefully , cheers,

Dan Zilic

Ps I lost at Poker. Oh, and at squash!


Auckland

12-Aug:
Shuja & Carruthers on track in Auckland
Gary Denvir reports


New Zealand's Kashif Shuja and Australian Simon Carruthers remain on track for another showdown in the semifinals of the Barfoot and Thompson Royal Oak Open in Auckland.

The trans Tasman rivals are both through to the quarterfinals, after wins in the opening two rounds on day one.

Top seeded Shuja cruised past kiwi qualifier Chris Lloyd 11/3 11/6 11/4 first up, before edging out Kuwait's Ali Alramezi in four.

And third seeded Carruthers beat kiwi qualifier Paul Tuffin in three, before battling to an 11/4 11/5 7/11 11/5 victory over fellow Australian Scott Arnold.

Shuja and Carruthers have already met in tournaments twice in the past two weeks, with the Australian coming out on top both times.

The big upset on day one saw second seeded Abdullah Almezayen from Kuwait bow out in the opening round, going down 9/11 11/6 11/10 11/7 to English qualifier Chris Ryder.

Ryder is joined in the quarter-finals, where he meet's Canada's Robin Clarke, by two other Englishmen, Chris Simpson and David Barnett.

ROYAL OAK WELCOME

Daniel Zilic reports
from Auckland


All arrived at Royal Oak Squash Club on Monday and have enjoyed the hospitality of our guests and billets so far. There has been more poker than squash going on lately, so it's time to get back on court slowly.

Stuart Crawford ...Today qualifying began and I am happy to report that Stuart Crawford, the Scotsman who flew the whole way to New Zealand only to be drawn against Laurence Delasaux in the first tournament and not get into the second tournament, just about slipped into the qualifying draw today.

Originally eight qualifying spots and eight local spots were taken, which meant that Stuart would be the only reserve player to miss out. Luckily a couple of local players did not turn up so Stuart got his well deserved shot at qualifying.

This meant however that he had local status and was therefore to play a PSA player in qualifying. This made the qualifying draw quite nerve-wracking for some. He almost had to play Chris Simpson as it was down to two names left in the hat, but ended up playing Michael Bill after all.

But first things first.



Two more local players did not show so Rik Smet of Belgium and Yasunori Ishiwata, the Japanese number one player, were given a bye.

Chris Ryder
started off the afternoon thumping Kiwi junior Josh Thom 3/0 and dishing out a 11/0 in the second.

Ryder is a former PSA Top 100 player and back to playing PSA after university. He is a bit of a dark horse and looks like he could do really well in the bottom half of the draw.

Local Chris Lloyd beat young Stephen Preefer in three, the same as Kiwi Mike Weston beating Chris McEldowney.

The second round of matches saw left-hander Paul Tuffin beat Brent Lewis 3/0, Chris Simpson sliding around like a tennis player on clay surface and scoring a convincing 3/0 win against Nigel LLoyd, and finally Stuart Crawford putting on a solid performance against Michael Bill winning 3/0.

Chris Ryder now has to play Almezayen, the Kuwaiti number two seed, Chris Simpson is playing Al-Ramzi.

Both Englishman have decent draws and are btinitely forces to be reckoned with. Apart from that the closest matches of the morning (we are starting at ten tomorrow) could be Temple v Gaskin and Nick Smith v Al Hussaini.

Daniel Zilic

Take Three in
New Zealand


The third stop on the North Island PSA circuit is at the Royal Oak Squash Club in Auckland, with New Zealand's Kashif Shuja hoping to avoid a three-peat.
 
The kiwi number one is top seed for the event, and all going to plan will meet Australian third seed Simon Carruthers in the semifinals.

The two players have already squared off twice in the last two weeks, with the Australian coming up trumps both times.

Carruthers knocked Shuja out of the first round at the South Australian Open late last month, and then repeated the dose in the semifinals of the Auckland Open at Remuera last weekend.

Second seeded Kuwaiti Abdullah Almezayen, and fourth seeded compatriot Bader Al Hussaini will also be looking for better things this week.

Almezayen crashed out of the second round at Remuera, while Al Hussaini failed to advance beyond the opening round. The first round gets underway on Friday August 12.

Poker Party ...
Poker Party



Chris Lloyd & Stephen Preefer



David Barnett

 

 

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