Affichage des articles dont le libellé est PSA. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est PSA. Afficher tous les articles

samedi 22 novembre 2008

NSC # 4 @ Kuala Lumpur


Le compteur de victoires successives de Stephane Galifi s'est arrêté à quinze à Kuala Lumpur face à Zac Alexander. Il n'avait plus perdu un match PSA depuis le quinze octobre à Shangai et il ne perd pas espoir d'améliorer son meilleur classement PSA (#40 en juillet 2005). Il vient de passer de la 121ème à la 83ème place. 





Zac Alexander Celebrates KL Success
Howard Harding

















Australian Zac Alexander celebrated his second PSA Tour title success in the Malaysian capital after winning the NSC Super Satellite No4 trophy at the Bukit Jalil National Squash Centre in Kuala Lumpur.

 

The third seed (pictured) made his breakthrough in the semi-finals of the $6,000 men's PSA Tour event when he beat local hero Ivan Yuen, the No7 seed who knocked out favourite Mike Corren in the previous round.

 

In the final, the 19-year-old from Brisbane faced fourth seed Stephane Galifi, the Frenchman who won last week's No3 event in KL.  But it was Alexander's day as the Australian teenager battled for 34 minutes to claim his 11-8, 3-11, 11-9, 12-10 victory - and the second PSA Tour title of his career.

 

Final:

[3] Zac Alexander (AUS) bt [4] Stephane Galifi (FRA) 11-8, 3-11, 11-9, 12-10 (34m)

 

Semi-finals:

[3] Zac Alexander (AUS) bt [7] Ivan Yuen (MAS) 11-9, 11-5, 9-11, 5-11, 11-8 (56m)

[4] Stephane Galifi (FRA) bt [2] Muhd Asyraf Azan (MAS) 11-9, 6-11, 11-4, 12-10 (53m)

 

Quarter-finals:

[7] Ivan Yuen (MAS) bt [1] Mike Corren (AUS) 11-6, 6-11, 8-11, 11-3, 11-8 (50m)

[3] Zac Alexander (AUS) bt Justin Beard (AUS) 11-7, 11-6, 11-6 (29m)

[4] Stephane Galifi (FRA) bt [5] Steven Robinson (AUS) 11-7, 11-2, 11-6 (23m)

[2] Muhd Asyraf Azan (MAS) bt [6] Elvinn Keo (MAS) 5-11, 11-8, 11-7, 11-9 (37m)

 

1st round:

[1] Mike Corren (AUS) bt Josh Cardwell (AUS) 11-1, 11-8, 11-13, 11-7 (29m)

[7] Ivan Yuen (MAS) bt [Q] Jo Wen Ng (MAS) 9-11, 11-7, 11-3, 11-9 (32m)

[3] Zac Alexander (AUS) bt [Q] Mithran Selvaratnam (MAS) 11-7, 11-5, 11-9 (25m)

Justin Beard (AUS) bt [8] Naresh Kumar (IND) 11-1, 11-7, 9-11, 15-13 (38m)

[5] Steven Robinson (AUS) bt Choong Kam Hing (MAS) 11-8, 13-11, 11-5 (24m)

[4] Stephane Galifi (FRA) bt [Q] Alex Grayson (NZL) 11-5, 11-1, 11-9 (34m)

[6] Elvinn Keo (MAS) bt Kamran Khan (MAS) 11-6, 11-7, 8-11, 11-6 (35m)

[2] Muhd Asyraf Azan (MAS) bt [Q] Peter Kviecinsky (SVK) 11-7, 6-11, 11-6, 14-12 (28m)

 

Qualifying finals:

Peter Kviecinsky (SVK) bt Chul Woo Sung (KOR) 12-10, 8-11, 11-4, 11-4 (45m)

Alex Grayson (NZL) bt Nyeon-Ho Lee (KOR) 11-8, 7-11, 10-12, 20-18, 12-10 (105m)

Mithran Selvaratnam (MAS) bt Andrew Cross (ENG) 14-12, 6-11, 11-8, 11-3 (34m)

Jo Wen Ng (MAS) bt Le Roy Leong (MAS) 11-8, 11-6, 11-9 (25m)

 

1st qualifying round:

Andrew Cross (ENG) bt Muhammad Zul Azri (MAS) 11-8, 11-2, 11-4 (16m)



source  : PSA News



NATIONAL SQUASH CENTRE

This stadium has been rated among the world's biggest and best equipped for squash events. By the flick of a switch, all the 10 courts for singles can be converted into eight doubles courts. The walls can be rearranged to form a bigger court which makes this complex a multi-purpose one.

The 11th centre court, a full glass-sided court, has a permanent seating capacity of 1,000 while the double-level centre is fully air-conditioned.
The total built-up area of the National Squash Centre is about 7,030 sq meters. It has a player's lounge, changing rooms, medical and conference room, press centre, cafeteria and more than 20 lounges.


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samedi 15 novembre 2008

Stéphane et Joshna @ Kuala Lumpur


BarrJo (n'hésitez pas à cliquer sur le lien, vous serez agréablement surpris) ne s'est pas trompé dans son commentaire d'hier, Stéphane s'est promené dans la finale où il ne lui a fallu que 22 min pour renvoyer Kamran Khan à ses études. Il avait pourtant remarquablement joué jusque là en passant par les qualifications et en éliminant les deuxième, troisième et cinquième têtes de série.


Résultats complets :


À remarquer : l'effort de la WISPA pour la promotion du squash féminin dont les primes de tournoi sont souvent plus importantes que celles attribuées aux Messieurs. C'était le cas à Kuala Lumpur où Joshna Chinappa , championne d'Inde, pour la cinquième fois,  et ex-championne au British Open en U19 et U17, s'est fait remettre un chèque plus important que celui de Stéphane. Nous sommes malheureusement encore très loin des montants distribués à Doha et Shangai !

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vendredi 14 novembre 2008

Galifi vs Khan en finale à Kuala Lumpur



Et une finale de plus pour Stéphane ...



L'adversaire du jour :



sources : SquashInfo PSA

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jeudi 13 novembre 2008

Galifi vs Yuen @ Kuala Lumpur




Test aujourd'hui à Kuala Lumpur pour Stéphane Galifi. Il rencontre 

Ivan Yuen (Malaysia)
Country:Malaysia
Born:15 September 1990
Age:18
Birthplace:Penang
Residence:Selangor
Height:179cm (5' 10")
 
Joined PSA:2007
Current World Ranking:157
Previous World Ranking:161
Highest World Ranking:148 (September 2008)
 
Racket:Prince
Coach:Ajaz Azmat

le cadre du tournoi $6,000 Men's NSC Super Satellite No3, Pusat Skuasy National Kompleks Sukan Negara, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Résultats complets et source : SquashInfo


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samedi 18 octobre 2008

Shake up @ PSA

L'amélioration du professionalisme à haut niveau permettra peut-être d'avoir une meilleure image du squash.


Saudi Ziad Al-Turki To Chair PSA Board

Howard Harding



In a major shake up of the board of the Professional Squash Association, former world number one and event promoter Peter Nicol, MBE, and businessman Ziad Al-Turki, have been elected directors of the players' organisation which boasts a flourishing men's world tour valued this year at more than $3 million.

 

Al-Turki (pictured) has been appointed Chairman of the new board.  The Saudi, Vice-Chairman of the ATCO Group, is the driving force behind the Saudi International.  Launched four years ago, the event will offer a record $250,000 prize fund this December.  Last month, Al-Turki announced that the ATCO Group will sponsor the PSA's flagship Super Series Finals Championship, which will be staged for the first time at The Queen's Club in London next year.

 

With Nicol and Al-Turki on the PSA board are Robert Graham, the US-based Treasurer; former player Mark Chaloner, who has stood down as Chairman; British lawyer Richard Bramall; and players Lee Beachill, who assumes the position of President, and FrenchmanRenan Lavigne, who becomes Vice President. 

 

Tony Hands and Martin Macdonnell, who retired from the board, have been appointed Honorary Life Members of the PSA.

 

"The appointment means a lot to me," said Al-Turki.  "It also means a lot to Saudi Arabia - going from a country not known in Squash, to having a Saudi head the PSA in four years is an accomplishment of its own.

 

"I have been working for some time at ways to raise the profile of squash, from meeting with potential sponsors to media and marketing companies - and this appointment will validate my position with them.  It shows that the efforts I have put are appreciated by all!

 

"But there’s a lot of work ahead, and with the PSA Executives, the Board and of course the players, I feel that we can reach our goals.  All of us have the same objectives and I feel that everyone feels positive about the direction the PSA is heading towards," Al-Turki added.

 

Richard Graham, the recently-appointed PSA CEO, added his enthusiasm for the new board line-up:  "There is an important array of skills and experiences which are now reflected in the new board - led by the new Chairman's proven international business expertise and the event promotion experience introduced by Peter Nicol. 

 

"While there is continuity within the board, there is also a sense of change with the new appointments," Graham added.  "The board provides valuable support to the efforts of myself and my colleague Alex Gough, the Chief Operating Officer.

 

"Our objective going forward include the re-launch of the top events on the PSA Tour in 2010, including planning dates and the sequence of events a year in advance to enhance broadcasting and sponsorship opportunities; the renegotiation of PSA's international TV and other commercial rights; and the elevation of the profile of Squash and, in particular, our players."



source : PSA

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vendredi 17 octobre 2008

Dans la série GiantKillers : Adrian Grant




Mohamed El Shorbagy pourrait participer au Belgian Dunlop Junior Open, il a l'âge requis. Après son exploit de mercredi, c'est Adrian Grant qui réalise l'exploit du jour aux World Squash Championships '08 à Manchester. Commentaires et photos sur le site officiel, SquashSite, SquashInfo, SquashBlog, SquashTalk


Framboise, je lis à l'instant ton récit des derniers événements et j'en éprouve une très grande tristesse. Ton style est (je ne veux pas parler au passé composé ni à l'imparfait) très personnel mais je crois que nous sommes très nombreux en effet à avoir passé beaucoup de temps à lire tes chroniques et multiples reportages. Pour ceux qui ne la connaissent pas, je les invite à lire les Chroniques Framboisiennes. Encore un grand merci pour tout ce que tu as fait pour le squash et j'espère, puisque tu te libères, qu'on aura l'idée de te réinviter à Bruxelles. 


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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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jeudi 21 août 2008

Next Events by Tommy Berden @ squash360

New Pro Circuit in the Netherlands
forexx pro tour.jpg
By Tommy Berden
Next Events


Next Events have launched a new pro circuit as a lead-up to the Forexx Women's World Open Squash 2009, which will take place next year in Amsterdam from 20-27 September.

The Forexx Pro Tour Squash 2008-2009 will consist of 10 professional tournaments, all counting towards the World Rankings. The theme of the new circuit will be 'The Road to the Forexx Women's World Open'.
The Forexx Pro Tour gives the Dutch men the chance to earn wildcards for next year's Dutch Open, while the women will be competing to earn main draw and qualifying places for the official individual World Championships for women in 2009.

The Forexx Pro Tour Ranking will determine the best Dutch players in the Forexx Pro Tour Squash 2008-2009. The points earned for this (internal) ranking will be based upon the World Ranking points that the Professional Squash Association (PSA) and Women's International Squash Players Association (WISPA) use. Players have to compete in at least half of the tournaments in the Forexx Pro Tour to be eligible for the available wildcards and hold Dutch nationality.

Next-Events_logo.JPG"We have launched the Forexx Pro Tour Squash 2008-2009 to provide the national top players with an opportunity to earn valuable points to climb up the World Rankings with the added bonus of competing for wildcards for the Worlds (women) or the Dutch Open (men)." said promoter Tommy Berden. "On top of that it ensures a long lead-up to the Forexx Women's World Open Squash 2009, which gives us multiple chances to promote this major event."

The first tournament of the new pro circuit will be the Forexx Dutch Open Squash 2008, which begins on September 2nd in the renowned Frans Otten Stadion in Amsterdam. This WISPA Gold championship and PSA 3 star event will be followed a few weeks later by the Pepsi Enschede Open Squash 2008 for the women (26-28 September) and the Turnstone Tilburg Trophy 2008 for the men (3-5 October).


Calendar Forexx Pro Tour Squash 2008-2009
Forexx Dutch Open 2008
| 02-07 September 2008 | Frans Otten Stadion, Amsterdam | PSA & WISPA
Pepsi Enschede Open 2008 | 26-28 September 2008 | Twentehallen, Enschede | WISPA
Turnstone Tilburg Trophy 2008 | 03-05 October 2008 | Pelikaan Tilburg, Tilburg | PSA
Q-sourcing Rotterdam Open 2008 | 07-09 November 2008 | Victoria Squash, Rotterdam | PSA
KEAN Delft Open 2008 | 28-30 November 2008 | Squash Delft, Delft | PSA
Flower Bulb Open 2008 | 12-14 December 2008 | Squash Hillegom, Hillegom | WISPA
Squash-Heroes Meersquash Open 2009 | 16-18 January 2009 | Meersquash, Hoofddorp | PSA & WISPA
SquashTime Eindhoven Open 2009 | 13-15 March 2009 | SquashTime, Eindhoven | WISPA
Eurosafe Solutions Zwolle Open 2009 | 08-10 May 2009 | Squash Zwolle, Zwolle | WISPA
Hemubo Squash Trophy 2009 | 29-31 May 2009 | Squash Almere, Almere | PSA

source: squash360

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vendredi 15 août 2008

John White interrogé par Shawn Patton @ Squash 360

Au gré de mes pérégrinations, je vous fais part de mes découvertes. Squash 360 est l'une des dernières, n'hésitez pas à vous y rendre. Combien de temps vont-ils résister ? Nul ne le sait et moi-même je ne suis pas éternel. En conséquence, j'essaie de sauver les perles que je découvre de temps en temps. En voici une:


ENCORE - White Shares His Ideas and Concerns E-mail

Interviewed by Shawn Patton

John White, another respected voice in professional squash discusses his ideas to improve the PSA and shares his perspectives on a wide range of topics.

How has the Tour improved over your years in the game?
Over let's say the last 15 years, I haven't seen any real change. Yes the the Tour is growing and that's great. But if we didn't have the Middle East we really wouldn't be a real circuit. Its come from people like Robert Edwards with the connections of top notch squash lovers in the Middle East putting up the money. Its not from the efforts of the PSA or players going in and doing exhibitions in new countries. Say the 4 of the top 12 players going in and doing some exhibitions to grow interest in our sport and Tour. If you put on a big tournament, this is the caliber of players you would get. We've actually never done that, WISPA does it and they get tournaments. Its either a lack of leadership or the players just sitting back on our butts doing nothing waiting for something to happen.
These large events coming up is not from the efforts of the PSA or players playing exhibitions, the organizers love squash and put on a big tournament, they have money and want to do that. But what happens in 09 or 2010 if Saudi or Kuwait don't want to continue? Where do we stand now? There's almost half a million dollars just from those two tournaments.
I've never really seen a five or a three year plan from the PSA. Either tournaments on the calendar or events they would like to add. But that's been going on now for years and years and years and has never changed.
Its almost a false economy and sense of security, the prize money increase, is it due to a number of large tournaments and one upmanship in one region of the world and our sport.
Thats all it is, in North America we have a great deal of smaller tournaments, which is great, what we need, these smaller tournaments help grow the tour and help support and grow the lower ranked players to gain ranking points, they are not just going away to just try and qualify, they do that, I used to do that, but it costs a fortune, but if there were 10 or 15 tournaments where I could play and be in the main draw, I'm earning points and a little bit of money feeling like a true professional rather than just going away to try and qualify and getting nothing for it. If you look at the major tournaments John Nimick in north america, Ziad Al-Turki in Saudi, Ross Triffit and his committe in Bermuda they all love squash. Its these organizers and the associations that are running and making these tournaments happen, its not because of what we the PSA or its players have gone out and got. Its what the organizer want to put on our tour. And Hong Kong, its one of our biggest events of the year as a player, we know when its going on, the only time it wasn't on was during the SARS thing was going on. I think it is 18 years running and maybe 20-22 years on our calendar if memory serves me right.
Ideas or hopes for PSA for changes
1. Geographically designed schedule I think. Like last year what Shabana did was just unbelievable and superhuman, what did he do ... win Qatar, then Saudi after only 1 day off, then flew to Hong Kong, back to Cairo for Egyptian Nationals, then to Bermuda, then back to across to India to play in the world Teams, winning the four majors. So the geographic design would make a world of difference. You could allow 2 days off between the finals and start of next event. You're not doing a long haul flight to attend the next event, that is the part that actually kills you.

2. A new CEO that runs the Tour as a business, not just someone who comes in because they love squash and wants to travel around. We need to have a CEO who will look into the events we used to have on and go to the top players and pay them to go put on some PSA exhibitions to get these events back on our Calendar. That needs to be done ASAP. Thats what we need to do in the future, approach things from a business standpoint, not hoping the events will come to us, we need to go to them. We have a little bit of TV, the Internet, but we need to go out and show the public what we have and get more smaller (and medium tournaments) which can grow into bigger tournaments.

3. A 12 month Calendar that we can look to and play for the next 12 months, which is something we don't have. We don't even know what is happening in January or February next year. As a player the only thing I can do is go back and look at past years and guess that these tournaments are going to be on again this year.
What can the players do?
Its hard for the players to go out and do a lot, some players are coaching, some are doing a lot of league over in Europe because that is how they make their money. I would like to see a few more PSA Tour Exhibitions to cities that were on the calendar, but aren't anymore. Go to countries where there used to be a circuit and go out and promote it. The players's expenses would be paid by the PSA /host country/organizers and the exhibitions would be scheduled to fit in with their schedule. Its not just about promoting ourselves, but the future of the Tour and upcoming players.
Is it true, and I don't know if this is one rule on the books, that is there but not always followed to the strict letter of the law ... that being the prohibition of paying appearance fees.
Thats been tried before, that you could play tournaments non-scoring. If you have an organizer who has a new tournament, he is allowed 2 non-scorers, he could go and say, hey Shabana can you come to our tournament, and officially you are not allowed to accept appearance fee for the tournament, that's the rule.
I would actually like the rule to be taken off and allow the players 2 tournaments where they can receive appearance money to support a tournament or organizer and if it happens, it happens. I would rather see it be put out on the table. Let's say for example a top 10 player was to play a small event and was paid $5,000 appearance fee to go play a 1 or 2 star tournament in Brazil ... he got payed extra and thats great because next year that tournament has grown, benefitted and is now a 4 or 5 star event.
The players have to go out and help the tour (and the rules have to be changed to allow them). Its the only way its going to grow.
It seems like a tangible way for players to try and help the tour, above the table and give event organizers the tools to attract sponsors, media, ticket sales and general interest.
exactly
What happened with the Board election.
I wasn't involved, I didn't vote for anybody. Seems like the same members on the Board, with Lee Beechill however the votes were counted was added. I'm slowly getting the gist of things, but until I hear directly from the Board members, I don't think the truth will ever be told exactly what happened. Which it should be. I agree with having players on the Board, but where we have former players who are just not involved in the tour from what I see,
I believe a fully functional and effective Board whether it is at a corporate level or at a sport body such as the PSA needs to serve a number of different purposes and roles. Visibly be a reflection of your membership and have a diversity of skills and opinions. Any thoughts?
The whole Board consists of squash players, except maybe Martin MacDonald, he has his own business so he probably knows the ins and out of business, but other than him, the Board consists of ex players or players still on the Tour
Many people have expressed if the PSA Board contained members with diversity of professional backgrounds, skills of accomplished business people, what happened with Gawain's contract, recent Board elections and the current "going through the motions" CEO search would not have happened and been tolerated.
Exactly, never would have. If we had a proper Board, he would have never had a 13 year contract. I don't know any other CEO who has a 13 year contract.
But where does the buck stop? Isn't the Board month in and month out responsible for representing and protecting the interests of the players and the Tour? They may have complained and asked for such things as a copy of the contracts or details around the CEO or revenues derived from the rights from TV and webstreaming, but what did they do about it, what did they accomplish?
Exactly. Nothing. Thats where it comes down to the Board not standing up and if half the Board has issues, isn't getting answers, they should come to the players and say, this is going on, we need to have a change or I'm going to stand down. But that doesn't happen. Regrettably, I've actually stopped going to AGMs, things are talked about for an hour and a half, and then you ask yourself just what has been decided, its like, well nothing. It happens all the time, talk, complaining, but nothing changes. Until we get a proper Board, who knows, we might have someone inside or outside of squash come in as CEO and say, we are going to have an all new vote of members, we are going to run it this way, we need to have a complete overhaul of who is on the Board.
Some people, myself included, are concerned the search process for the CEO is not being conducted in a manner that will attract the very best candate possible and may be deliberately structured to result in minimal interest to make it easier for one of the existing Board Members to assume the role in the absence of other candidates?
I haven't even seen an e-mail to let me know who is applying or interested. But that is our Board unfortunately. What are they going to do this time around to make sure we have a way to remove a CEO (or Board member for that matter) if things aren't working out. I would like to know these things as soon as possible.
What do you think of the benefits of a few respected players and other stakeholders such as promoters on a selection committee to select the new CEO? And for that matter a permanent seat on the Board for Promoters, one that is rotated on a quarterly basis? Might the Board be more representative of the Tour and gain some valuable perspectives?
Right now SOME of the Board members are looking out for their own interests, wanting to travel to tournaments, see how the top players are going now, getting to hang out with their friends, have Board meetings for eight hours and discuss things, but nothing happens. They get to jet set around the world and have fun. That's what its been, well that's all I have seen. Even when we have had our AGM, we've never had our whole Board there. Every year I've been, 2 or 3 of the Board are not there. Its sad, very sad. How can you expect the players to make the effort to attend, when some of the Board members don't, even knowing well in advance the date of the meeting. Lee Beechill will be good on the Board, he has some good ideas, is involved in real estate and has a business partner. But he needs the other guys on the Board to feel the same way. He, I think, wants to make some changes, but the guys that have been there for 10 years probably aren't going to want to change.

Did you ever get any details on the Webstreaming rights selection process?
Never got anything, why they chose this company, what they were looking for, why they didn't get other companies to compete. Nothing. That's another grey area where I believe had we should have gone to 4 or 5 companies, give them a trial and speak to them as a business. All I know is Horizon have the contract or the rights, for 3, 4 or 5 years, I don't know. I would like to know. What rights do they have, do we have the ability to branch out or try other companies that can do the job a hell of a lot better.

Related Articles
Q&A with John White - Part One
Q&A with John White - Part Two
White the Family Guy


source: White Shares His Ideas and Concerns

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mercredi 6 août 2008

Encore un peu de tourisme

altitude 10528,09 km



altitude 4426,51 km




encore un peu plus bas ...




Clare and surrounds


Clare

A pretty country town at the centre of one of South Australia's premier wine regions, Clare offers fine dining, panoramic views and secluded accommodation.

Just north of the town is one of South Australia's finest country racecourses, along with a cluster of wineries: Scarlatties Gallery, Mt Surmon, Cardinham and Phoenix Estate. Wineries in and around Clare include Leasingham (housed in the old Jam Factory), the much-lauded Tim Adams and Knappstein (in the old Enterprise Brewery). Clare is also at the northern end of the Riesling Trail. Bike hire is available from Clare Valley Cycle Hire.

Choose from a gourmet food and wine experience, to traditional pub grub. Enjoy the view from Salt 'n' Vines Bar and Bistro, or chic dining across the road at Coffee & Cork. A relaxed vineyard atmosphere is to be had at one of Clare's most acclaimed restaurants, Neagles Rock. Citadel 5453 is in the heart of town; the historic building overlooks the Hutt River.

There are three pubs in town, all within a couple of minutes walk of each other. For nightlife, the Bentleys Hotel at the southern end of the main street features live bands at weekends.

For those with a sporting interest there's the highly rated Clare Golf Course, as well as lawn tennis courts and bowling greens. Spare the time to browse through a number of specialty shops and be sure to look out for local handicrafts and produce.


Pour ceux que le golf, le tennis ou le bowl n'attirent pas plus que cela comme sport, il reste le Valleys Lifestyle Centre :

Le même environnement à l'aide de Google Earth et à partir de la street caméra 177 :



Comme vous l'avez remarqué, il existe 3 terrains de squash dans cette petite ville d'un peu plus de quatre mille habitants et c'est là que la communauté viticole locale , aidée par le South Australian Government, a organisé l' Australian Open que David Palmer n'avait pas encore gagné avant cette année.

... the South Australian Government had given organisers some funding for local promotional activity, while the Clare and Gilbert Valley Shire Council had also given the tournament the use of the Valleys Lifestyle Centre as a venue, as well as a substantial cash grant.
But he said the most lasting benefit was the upsurge of interest in squash in Clare, which experienced a surge after last year’s tournament and which now has 49 juniors in its program.



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lundi 4 août 2008

Vacances ? Vous avez dit vacances …

Pour beaucoup d’entre nous, peut-être. Pour les joueurs de squash, ils étaient au turbin un peu partout. Notamment en Egypte où les producteurs de pétrole peuvent être remerciés pour leur mécénat. On ne peut qualifier autrement, pour l’instant, la générosité de ces entrepreneurs grâce auxquels le sport qui nous passionne peut apporter aux meilleurs une légère compensation pour tous les efforts fournis pour arriver à leurs niveaux de prestations.

En complément du remarquable travail de Framboise pour vous faire vivre le PetroSport International Open qui se termine aujourd’hui, voici quelques informations sur le cadre dans lequel se déroule le tournoi. N'hésitez pas à cliquer sur les images ci-dessous pour vous faire une idée de la dimension du projet et pouvoir lire les commentaires.



Ces images ne correspondent évidemment pas à la réalité et le projet global ci-dessous ne sera pas réalisé demain. Heureusement que l’année n’a pas été précisée lorsque l’on parle d’ouverture au mois d’octobre ! C’est ce qui justifie sans doute l’emploi de l’adjectif soft.


Quant au cadre réel, grâce aux images satellite de Microsoft (toujours à l’avant-garde), Yahoo et Google, on peut avoir une idée de l’évolution du projet.





En s'élevant encore dans le ciel, on pourra situer plus précisément où se trouve ce complexe sportif. Le repère jaune le plus à droite vous situe le SKY CLUB par rapport Al-Qahira, les trois autres montrant Nasr City (à 10 min), Heliopolis (15 min) et Maadi (20 min).


Le Caire (, romanisation : Al-Qahira, La Victorieuse) est la capitale de l'Égypte et a une population officielle de près de 17,5 millions d'habitants, mais plus de 25 millions de Cairotes y vivent en réalité. Sa population était estimée à dans les années 1920. C'est la plus grande ville de l'Afrique et du Moyen-Orient. Bien que Al-Qahira soit le nom officiel, on l'appelle plus souvent en arabe égyptien Misr, le nom arabe de l'Égypte.

Pour la suite, voir Wikipédia.org...

Après le tourisme, quelques mots d'accueil. Les sponsors ont sûrement été sensibles à la hausse constantes des coûts puisque les 125.000 sont devenus 140.000 USD ce qui devrait garantir un prix de 13.500 EUR au vainqueur du tournoi.



Place au sport enfin pour regretter que les demi-finales d'hier se soient toutes les deux terminées de façon dramatique pour les spectateurs:


The crowd watching the climax of the Petrosport International Championship in Cairo will be treated to an all-Egyptian final - but the crowd witnessing the semi-finals of the $140,000 PSA Super Series Platinum squash event at the city's Sky Club were given two truncated matches after both ended prematurely following retirements.

But Wael El Hindi, the fifth seed from Cairo, and Karim Darwish, the No4 seed who is also from the host city, will both be celebrating their maiden appearances in a Super Series event final after their semi-final successes.

El Hindi, the world No12, ended world number one Amr Shabana's chance of winning the 14th Super Series title of his career when the top seed stopped the match within a point of the end of the second game.

"I was already injured before the tournament - I had an injury in my wrist - but yesterday when I was playing Peter (Barker), I got a blister on my big toe, so that's why I didn't complete the match," Shabana explained to www.squashsite.co.uk afterwards.

El Hindi, now in the 11th Tour final of his career, was full of sympathy for his friend after the 11-9, 10-3 (ret.) win: "I saw that he just couldn’t move when I played a disguised shot, and I knew then he was in trouble. I know he is already injured with his wrist, but that was different.

"Shabana is a friend of mine; I hope that this is not serious, and that he recovers very soon. He is such a player, and I do respect him, and so should the crowd, because what he’s achieved, nobody else could have achieved but him. We should be all so proud of him."

World No8 Darwish swept to victory in just 14 minutes, beating Malaysia's eighth seed Mohd Azlan Iskandar 11-3, 11-2 (ret.).

"I injured my groin a week before Malaysia," said a disconsolate Iskandar later. "I had a lot of physio treatment and ultrasound, and that made it better for a while. I’ve been on anti-inflammatories for two weeks now!

"Tonight, I thought that I was going to be fine, and the idea was to get on court, and test it, see how it was going, and see if I could play or not. But when I heard that Shabana had retired, I knew I HAD to give something to the crowd, and decided to play.

"But I just couldn’t do anything, I just couldn’t move."

Darwish, celebrating his 20th Tour final and 5/4 ahead on head-to-head clashes with his compatriot since 2000, has his eyes focussed on the match: "I’m looking forward to playing him in the final; this is a tournament I really want to win."

Semi-finals:
[5] Wael El Hindi (EGY) bt [1] Amr Shabana (EGY) 11-9, 10-3 ret. (30m)
[4] Karim Darwish (EGY) bt [8] Mohd Azlan Iskandar (MAS) 11-3, 11-2 ret. (14m)

source: SquashInfo



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