mardi 23 septembre 2008

Portrait : David Palmer

Antwerpen a longtemps été le domicile de David et les jeunes joueurs de la VSF s'en souviendront.



Palmer Eyes Tour Half Century In Baltimore

David Palmer is seeded to win this week's Merritt Properties Open in the USA - and, if the world number five from Australia reaches the final of the $40,000 championship in Baltimore, it will mark his 50th appearance in the climax of a PSA Tour squash event.

The 32-year-old from Lithgow in New South Wales has enjoyed an illustrious career since joining the Professional Squash Association in 1994 - winning World Open titles in 2002 and 2006; becoming world number one in September 2001; and - just four months ago - clinching his fourth British Open crown. With a total of 23 PSA titles to his name, Palmer boasts more Tour successes than any other current player.

Now based in Boston in the USA, Palmer was runner-up in the Sweet Home Chicago Open - the first squash tournament in the USA to be held outdoors - earlier this month.

"I did not realise that it was my 49th final last week! I don't pay so much attention anymore to these details as I used to when I was younger and chasing points in tournaments to raise my ranking," explained Palmer, who reached his first final at the Kleenheat Open in Perth, Australia, in September 1995, before going on to claim his maiden title two years later at the Ecuador Open in South America.

"But I am proud of this achievement. I think making so many finals over the last ten years has shown my strength and consistency on the Tour, which reflects back to the training and coaching I received from Shaun (Moxham) over the years."

"I still remember that first win in Ecuador in 97, not only for the win but that was the same day as Princess Diana died, and we had a minute's silence before the final."

The highlights of Palmer's career? "It's hard to go past my two World Opens wins and this year's win at theBritish Open as my best wins."

The distinguished Australian, who broke into the world top 20 in 1999, has maintained an unbroken presence in the world top ten since September 2000! But Palmer concedes that achieving his half century this week will not be straightforward:

"It would be nice to make it number 50 this week in Baltimore, but it won't be easy. There are a lot of good players in the draw, including John WhiteStewart Boswell and Peter Barker - who beat me last week in the final at Chicago, which ended up a great tournament when the rain stopped, with the glass court outside in the city.

"But I'm looking forward to playing in Baltimore this week and getting some more hard matches in the lead up to the World Open in Manchester in a few weeks," concluded Palmer.

The Merritt Properties Open gets underway at the Merritt Athletic Club in Baltimore on Thursday (25 September) following two days of qualifying. Palmer faces a qualifier in the first round and is expected to meet second seed Peter Barker, the Englishman who beat him in the Chicago climax, in the final on Sunday

1st round draw:
[1] David Palmer (AUS) v Qualifier
[7] Omar Mosaad (EGY) v Qualifier
[4] Olli Tuominen (FIN) v Qualifier
[8] Hisham Mohd Ashour (EGY) v Lefika Ragontse (BOT)
[6] Shahier Razik (CAN) v Alister Walker (ENG)
[3] Stewart Boswell (AUS) v Qualifier
[5] John White (SCO) v Eric Galvez (MEX)
[2] Peter Barker (ENG) v Omar Abdel Aziz (EGY)

source: Squashinfo

David @ PSA

David Palmer has been Australia's top squash player for most of this decade. The 31-year-old from Lithgow in New South Wales topped the world rankings for the first time in September 2001, two months after becoming the first Australian for twenty years to win the British Open title. 

A world top ten player since September 2000, Palmer has amassed 21 titles from 45 PSA Tour final appearances since September 1995 - his latest victory in the Dutch Open in September 2007 extending his lead ahead of Frenchman Thierry Lincou (with 18 titles) as the current player with the most Tour trophies to his name.

He claimed his first PSA title, the Ecuador Open, in August 1997 - and went on to bring his tally to four titles by the end of the year.

In 2002, Palmer won the World Open crown in dramatic style in his adopted home town of Antwerp in Belgium, where he fought back from two games down to beat Scotland’s John White in the final.

It was in 2004 that he joined a select band of three-times British Open champions when he successfully defended his 2003 title, defeating the then world champion Amr Shabana in the final in Nottingham.

After his World Open success in 2002, history repeated itself four years later when Palmer, in his third World Open final, again recovered from a two-game deficit to defeat Gregory Gaultier in the 2006 climax in Egypt. 

After winning the singles silver medal in the Commonwealth Games in 2006, Palmer took time off in his homeland to be with his wife Melinda for the birth of their first child, daughter Kayla, in June.

Palmer's 2007 campaign began with a runners-up finish in the Canadian Classic in Toronto in January, when he lost to rising Egyptian star Ramy Ashour in the final. 

The following month, he brushed aside all opposition in Linköping to win the Swedish Open to mark up his 20th trophy success.

In April, he reached the final of the Qatar Classic for the fourth time - and again went down to Ashour in a 66-minute final.

source: PSA


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