Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Olympic Games. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Olympic Games. Afficher tous les articles

mardi 1 janvier 2013

Five years... ago @ The Guardian



@ The Guardian

sport blog 620

Monday 17 March 2008 12.03 GMT

Squash diminished by zero status

Without a Steve Redgrave-type figure, how can squash become anything more than a minority sport?

Britain currently boasts 13 male squash players in the world's top 50, including three in the top 10. On the women's side, it has 11 players in the world's top 50, with three in the top 10. The Lawn Tennis Association, buoyed only by the aberrational success of the Murray brothers, can only dream of that level of domination.
But if we're so very good at squash, why do we care so little about the professional game? The names of Jonah Barrington and the Khans, Jahangir and Jansher, may resonate with sports fans of a certain age, but who has heard of James Willstrop, Nick Matthew or Peter Barker, the British trio in the world's top 10?
Squash receives virtually no coverage in the mainstream media. Visit the sport homepage of any national newspaper's website, Guardian Unlimited included, and you'll find that the pecking order is roughly the same: the Premier League's 'big four' clubs, football not involving the big four, cricket, rugby, Lewis Hamilton, Andy Murray, golf, horse racing, Ricky Hatton/Joe Calzaghe (delete where applicable), and, finally, 'other sport'.
Squash always comes under 'other sport', along with a random assortment of other unfashionable activities, such as hockey, badminton and bowls. All these three sports feature in the Olympics but squash is not even an Olympic event.
The 2012 London Games would have been the ideal platform for British players to demonstrate their skill, but the IOC decided not to replace softball and baseball, the two sports that were voted off the 2012 programme, with any new activities. Squash was first in the queue but it's still waiting for the Olympic call. Yet without a Steve Redgrave-type figure to both inspire young people to take up the sport and to attract sponsorship, how can squash become anything more than a minority sport?
There are only two times in the last decade that I remember squash breaking free from its cramped, 'other sport' annex. Firstly, when Peter Nicol, a former world champion, chose to compete for England, rather than his native Scotland. Inevitably, he was branded a traitor. Secondly, when Vicky Botwright, a fine player in her own right, declared a desire to wear a skimpy, thong-style outfit on court - cue tabloid-friendly pictures of Botwright wearing such an outfit. She later claimed that it was nothing more than a PR stunt, designed by the Women's International Squash Players Association (who go by the world-beating acronym WISPA). The stunt succeeded in generating a lot of interest in Botwright's bottom, but very little interest in women's squash.
Sports editors care little for squash, but they would argue that they give the public what they want - and the public don't want squash, clearly. In truth, we are a nation of squash players, not squash lovers. Many thousands of Britons play the game, myself included, but who goes to watch a squash tournament?
On Friday, I saw the aforementioned Willstrop defeat Australia's Cameron Pilley in the final of the ISS Canary Wharf Classic, a world ranking event now in its fifth year. I was not surprised to discover that the audience was mainly comprised of white, male thirty/fortysomethings, most of whom had a firm grip on a bottle of Budweiser or Kronenbourg. We were in Canary Wharf after all, and on a Friday evening. These City boys, clad typically in pink shirts, seemed to be having a fine time, even if some of them seemed unsure as to the identity of the competitors. 'Come on Cam!' cheered one. 'Why are you cheering the Aussie?' his mate replied. 'Am I?'
Squash makes for a surprisingly good spectator sport, especially in the modern era, where glass-walled courts and white balls make it easy to follow the action. There are longer, more absorbing rallies than in tennis, whilst the combination of power and finesse is impressive. However, the constant intervention of the referee to adjudicate on lets and strokes (when one player is judged to have interfered with the other's shot, the rally can be replayed - a let - or a free point may be awarded to the player who was impeded - a stroke) becomes rather frustrating, for players and audience alike.
Generally speaking, though, it's a fast, dynamic game: Willstrop took five sets to get the better of Pilley, yet the match lasted little more than an hour. Squash's perennial problem lies in the player-audience dynamic. The players are contained by four walls, which makes it difficult for spectators to relate to those on court, even in a live setting. I did not feel that I gained much by watching the players in the flesh, rather than on TV. Maybe, in the distant future, some genius will figure out a way to remove the walls. Until then, squash will stay in its little box, marked 'other sport'.


and ... in comments :



racquetdynamics
Well done to Oliver for writing such a good article, I was wondering if we would ever hear anything written on this subject. Also very good points added on subsequent posts.
Squash can be a great sport to watch, it just depends on the match. Anyone who ever saw Jonathon Power play live (something I will never forget, even though it was only an exhibition match I saw) would be left in no doubt that this is a sport with immense potential. I was also at a small PSA tournament in Europe at the start of March, and one of the semifinals was a fantastic spectacle, won by a young Welshman called Jethro Binns. Awe-inspiring stamina!
The potential that squash has has unfortunately been limited over the years by the APPALLING standard of administration and promotion done by the world governing body and the major squash federations in those countries where the sport is most popular.
It is also a serious problem, as previous posts have stated, that squash courts are being identified as unnecessary "wastes of space" by these stupid corporate gyms, who are obviously run by people too thick to notice that there is actually healthy demand for GOOD QUALITY squash courts, but obviously that demand does not exist for courts that have HOLES IN THE FRONT WALL, LIGHTS WITHOUT LIGHTBULBS, DUST, DIRT, PIECES OF FLUFF AND OTHER ASSORTED DETRITUS ON THE FLOOR, DOORS THAT DON'T CLOSE PROPERLY, etc. etc. etc.
One of the best things about the British Isles has always been the tradition of squash playing on all levels throughout the country, and this has been reflected in the numbers of top professionals we've had on the pro tour over the years. However this success has been threatened by the closure of courts, to the extent that many people no longer have adequate facilities to use, and have had to stop playing, or cannot play as frequently as they'd like.
In an age when there is a lot of talk about obesity, over-indulgence of alcohol, food, excessive violence, aggression and so on, it would be nice if the government would get behind the sport of squash, because there is surely a strong case to suggest that this great sport can offer us a wealth of answers to the above problems: - A dynamic, fun, social sport that people of any age can play - A very affordable, egalitarian sport - you can pick up all the equipment you need for practically nothing - A game of squash burns more calories than any other sport, and participants use more muscles throughout the body than any other sport, so you get more of a work-out but also have great fun during it - far more fun than being in the gym, which is a chore - As one previous post stated eloquently, "you can hit the bejaysus out of the ball but still keep it in play", so you can vent your aggression in a controlled environment and get fit doing it - surely this is better (and more fun) for young people than drinking White Lightning on street corners and stabbing people? - Britain already has a wealth of squash stars in the PSA and WISPA rankings, they could get behind a government campaign to HIT THE COURT. Come to think of it, what are legends like John White and Peter Nicol doing these days since they retired? Get them on board, too.
I was recently speaking to a young Egyptian professional at a tournament (ranked in top 90 PSA), I asked him what it's like in Egypt these days with squash. He said everybody plays there, it's like the top sport in Egypt! I asked him about the clubs, is there sufficient capacity for so many people to play (huge population they have there). He said no problem for that, there are so many clubs there, so there's enough capacity. And that all the kids are playing, which is clearly the key thing, and the reason why they have so many top players including guys like Amr Shabana (world #1) and Wael El Hindi (top 10 player) to name but a few.
These guys like Shabana and El Hindi have profiles akin to that of David Beckham in Egypt. How did Egypt get to be the leading force in world squash? We need to learn from them. They're not playing on broken, chipped, dusty courts. They're not turning their squash clubs into apartment blocks and putting bloody exercise bikes and rowing machines into the areas where people enjoy playing squash. Egypt is a country of civilised, highly intelligent and forward-thinking people. They know what they're doing. If we want Britain to continue to have players of the calibre of, say, John White, Peter Nicol and now James Willstrop, then we need to learn from the Egyptians. And the British government needs to get behind squash, which could pretty much single-handedly wipe out obesity, violence and lack of direction which unfortunately characterise British youth these days.




PaulLynch
Thanks Oliver for writing the article and the subsequent postings by interested parties.
I am in the newly created position of the Sales & Marketing Manager of England Squash and have now been in the position for 3 months. I would agree with many of the comments made however would disagree with others, and would also assert that England Squash has had many successes however would also assert there are many things that need to be improved.
The management and board of England Squash are committed to improving the profile and playing numbers of Squash and are making many strides in doing this which may not yet be visible, however please be assured that progress is being made and are confident that you will see the results of this over the coming year and years to come. We unfortunately are not football with budgets, profile and large marketing departments to match however all of the staff at England Squash are giving it our all with what we have available to grow the game of squash.
I need to point out that the future of squash is bright, more courts are being built than being closed and over half of the 500,000 people who play squash every month are under 35 amongst numerous other positives. I am open to ideas, suggestions and criticisms and can be contacted at paul.lynch@englandsquash.com.




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jeudi 13 novembre 2008

US Squash : nouveau site

Les USA continuent à investir, ils viennent de renouveler leur site. Excellente nouvelle pour les jeux olympiques. Plus ils accorderont de l'importance à ce sport, plus les autres nations suivront et influenceront peut-être un vote pour son élection aux jeux de 2016.

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jeudi 16 octobre 2008

Le squash et les jeux olympiques

Il y aura peut-être, on peut rêver, un participant des jeux olympiques de 2016 parmi les 319 inscrits du Belgian Dunlop Junior Open 2008 ...

Jahangir Khan leads squash campaign fulfil Olympic ambition

Jahangir Khan, the World Squash Federation president, has outlined its 'Olympic Dream' as the sport aims to gain inclusion to the 2016 Games.

 
Jahangir Khan leads squash campaign fulfil Olympic ambition (James Willstrop in action at the World Open)
On bended knee: James Willstrop (left) says players are 'almost begging' to have squash included as an Olympic sport Photo: ED SYKES

Squash, which has been targeting an Olympic spot since 1986, will be vying for one of two available openings for the 2016 Games when the International Olympic Committee assembly meets in Copenhagen on Oct 2.

The sport narrowly failed to be included for the 2012 Games by virtue of the IOC's controversial two-thirds majority decision three years ago in Singapore - despite being voted the number one sport. However, under a new rule, it will take a simple majority vote for a sport to be voted onto the Olympic programme.

Khan, a six-times world champion, said: "It has been too long. We cover all the Olympic criteria and we are deserving to be on the programme. I know what the players feel about it [being excluded] and to some current players they may never get the chance to play in the Olympics."

As part of the initiative, the WSF have also been given the players' backing by signing an Olympic pledge that winning gold would be the pinnacle in their sport. Khan added: "I can guarantee that all top 32 players would play in the Olympics."

England's James Willstrop, the world No 3, has also put his weight behind the bid, saying that many players are "increasingly doubtful as to what the IOC criteria is".

"We never get answers as to why we are not in the Olympic regime. They [the IOC] will see how good it is and then they might be able to tell us why we can't get into the Olympic Games. The sport should be there and every other racket sport is. You feel cynical as to the reasons and in the end we are almost begging to be included which in the end results in everything getting quite tiring."

He added: "To me squash fits the Olympic ideal and takes in every attribute: it is healthy, easy to play, largely unaffected by drugs as well as it being of global appeal. Some of the other sports do not do that I'm afraid."

Willstrop, who is bidding to become the first Briton to win the World Open since Peter Nicol in 1999, believes the Manchester event is the perfect showcase to highlight the sport's appeal.

He said: "I think we have to latch on to this tournament. If we let it go nothing will happen, but if we tell the world then we might achieve something.

"Television is somewhere we have to improve and it certainly has to be slicker. When I go to particular tournaments I am blown away by how spectacular the venues are as well as being how far removed it is from the old: the cold back courts from the Seventies and Eighties."

Nick Rider, England Squash chief executive, said: "It is a tough competition as there some big sports on the candidate list, but there is that feeling that squash has Olympic credentials. A lot of people are surprised it's not on the agenda."

The six other sports shortlisted for Olympic inclusion are: baseball, golf, karate, rugby, softball and roller sports.

The road to Copenhagen

Oct 2008 
IOC observers Sir Craig Reedie and Pierre Ducrey at the World Championships

Nov 2008 
All candidate sports present to the IOC programme commission in Lausanne. Executive board will then submit proposals to full IOC in Copenhagen on which sports to include

Dec-Mar 2009 
Detailed questionnaire to be completed

Apr 2009 
IOC programme commission will prepare reports assessing seven shortlisted sports

Jun 2009 
For the first time, a presentation will be made by federations to IOC executive board in Lausanne

Oct 2009 
Executive board proposal submitted to IOC assembly session in Copenhagen


source : Telegraph.co.uk

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lundi 8 septembre 2008

Squash @ Chicago

Si les Américains y croient, ils ne faut peut-être pas désespérer de voir le squash devenir sport olympique !

Chicago to Make Squash History
sweethomechicago.jpg
Sweet Home Chicago Open 
Chicago, Illinois, USA 
By Amy Magro
 

Chicago will make sports history September 9-15 as Michigan Avenue plays host to the Sweet Home Chicago Open – the first-ever professional squash tournament to be held outdoors in North America.   

With the sponsorship of Lakeshore Athletic Clubs, Zeller Realty Group, Caledonian Fund Services, SmithBucklin and The Fairmont Chicago the SHCO will will be staged on an all-glass court in Pioneer Court, between Tribune Tower and the Chicago River .

This "open-to-the-public" event is widely expected to draw the world’s top-ranked players as the newest stop on the Professional Squash Association (PSA) and U.S. Squash Association tournament series.
 “Being among the first squash tournaments of this scale to be held outdoors, the Sweet Home Chicago Open will be an innovative forum to show off the fun and exciting game of squash,” said Kevin Klipstein, President, U.S. Squash.  “With its passionate base of fans who also participate in all types of sports, Chicago presents the ideal location to host this first-of-its-kind event.”  
  
metro_squash.jpgEndorsed by the U.S. Squash Association and the PSA, the Sweet Home Chicago Open will include professional and exhibition matches, as well as clinics involving children from area schools and the METROSquash program, which combines academics and athletics for inner-city youth attending Chicago Public Schools. Exhibition play will feature Canadian-born Jonathon Power, a two-time World No. 1 champion who is regarded by many as the greatest squash player of his generation.  
  
In conjunction with the professional tournament, this event will also showcase approximately 200 local and national amateurs in the Great Lakes Open, which will be held at The University Club of Chicago, Lakeshore Athletic Clubs and the Union League Club of Chicago.  The exhibition matches will further reinforce Chicago’s love of amateur athletics, as evidenced by the City’s Bid for the 2016 Olympic Games.  
  
“Squash has long been a game that celebrates the skill and accomplishments of the professional and amateur athlete,” said Gus Cook, North America Representative, PSA.  “As the squash community aspires to find its place among other Olympic events, the Sweet Home Chicago Open is the perfect opportunity to demonstrate the appeal of and enthusiasm for this great game and the skill of the athletes who play it.”  
  
To date, squash – a racquet sport recognized by the IOC and one of 5 sports under review for incorporation into the 2016 Olympics – is played in more than 150 countries by an estimated 15 million people, including some 500,000 players in the United States.  The widespread interest in the game was a draw to many of the tournament’s sponsors. 
  
“As Chicago’s sponsor of the Virginia Slims Invitational in 1974 and the partner and co-founder of World Team Tennis, we believe the Sweet Home Chicago Open is just as unique and intriguing as those sporting institutions,” said Jordon Kaiser, Founding Partner, Lakeshore Athletic Clubs

source: squash360

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vendredi 15 août 2008

citius, altius, fortius, ...

Sans commentaires ...

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lundi 11 août 2008

Alan Thatcher @ 360


About the Author: Alan Thatcher is a journalist, event promoter and TV commentator. Alan joins Squash360.com as Contributing Editor. Come back each Monday as Alan offers his unique insight into the sport. In the weeks and months ahead Alan will interview key figures in the game and share plenty of stories from down the years.

A DEFINING MOMENT FOR SQUASH AS WE JUMP THROUGH HOOPS TO GET INTO THE OLYMPICS

Well, the Olympic Games are in full swing in Beijing and once again squash is not invited to the party.

It will be the same in 2012, when the Olympics return to London. How fitting it would have been for squash to make its debut in the city where the sport was invented, at Harrow School, in Victorian days.

However, the battle is now on for squash to be accepted as an Olympic sport in 2016 as the World Squash Federation continues its lobbying procedures. The host city of the 2016 Games will be announced in Copenhagen, Denmark, on October 2, 2009.



The bidding cities for 2016 are Chicago, Madrid, Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo. Of the four, Chicago and Madrid would appear to offer the best options for squash. Chicago has staged several major PSA events in recent years and, after a gap year because of sponsorship difficulties, a new event, the Sweet Home Chicago Open, makes its first appearance in September, with the glass court staged in a spectacular city centre location.

The selection of stunning venues is a major plus factor for squash, and Madrid offered a royal place to showcase the Women's World Open last year. Significantly, the event was hosted by the Madrid 2016 Olympic Games bid team to demonstrate their ability to stage major international events.

One fascinating element of the tournament was the fact that Spanish TV shot the event in high definition. The WSF kindly asked me to commentate on the highlights programme and the quality of some of the filming was mind-blowing.

If you haven't seen it, try to get a copy from the WSF offices. The super slow-motion replay captured one of the Grinham sisters making a huge lunge for the ball and, to me, commentating in a studio in London and watching the drama unfold, on a huge screen in front of me, it seemed like a defining moment for the televising of our sport.

Our leading athletes need to be lightning fast, have incredible reflexes and be able to sustain a phenomenal physical workrate to succeed at the highest level. However, despite this impressive array of elements, which makes our sport so compelling and exciting to watch in the flesh, television has failed to capture the very essence of the sport.

In the past, an oft-repeated criticism of televised squash is that it makes the game look too easy and fails to show how hard the players are working.

However, by slowing down the movement, and watching an incident unfold, frame by tantalising frame, you could appreciate the incredible stretching, twisting and turning required to retrieve the ball. It was truly, truly amazing.

There is a staggering irony here. While squash remains outside the Olympic fraternity, the costs of producing this ground-breaking TV coverage were absorbed by a proud Spanish city keen to outdo the achievements of the 1992 Games held in Barcelona.

The footballing rivalries of the mighty Real Madrid and Barcelona are a microcosm of the bitter political, cultural and regional differences that dominate Spanish history. But let's not dwell on that here.

At current rates, the production costs of televising squash in HD are at least £25,000 (50,000 USD) a day. I know because that's the figure I was quoted by a major sports marketing company's TV division for a joint partnership in creating a new event especially for television.

Finding that kind of money is a tough challenge for squash.

The Madrid 2016 team clearly enjoy the solid support of their national broadcasters. How wonderful it would be for squash to experience that level of backing, with national TV stations willingly underwriting such superb coverage.

Currently, Malaysia's broadcasters are the only ones to translate their nation's love affair with Nicol David into regular TV coverage.

We can only hope that if squash succeeds in gaining a place in the Olympics then increased TV exposure will follow.

By being an Olympic sport, our national federations will receive increased government funding to assist the process and help to raise the profile of the sport.

Let's wish the WSF every success in their endeavours. Our leading squash players would view an Olympic medal as the ultimate highlight of their careers.

I can't see that view being shared by multi-millionaire golfers, who are also bidding for a place in the Olympics, or by the cosseted tennis players who are already there.

One thing's for sure: an Olympic squash event would not be susceptible to the Beijing smog.

Let's hope those IOC delegates voting in Copenhagen next year have a clear view of squash's qualities. I hope they enjoyed the video from Spain.


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