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AUCKLAND PARK - SQUASH
Squash Coaching
Ask Matthew Woodroffe about squash coaching and the CCJ squash pro
shop!!!
- Squash Coaching for any standard of play (get fit, have fun!!!):
R100 - 30 min, R150 - 45 min, R200 - 60 min
- Matches with Squash Professional: R150 - 45 min
THE CCJ SQUASH DOUBLES CLUB CHAMPIONSHIPS
The CCJ Squash Doubles Club Championships will be held at Auckland Park on 8, 10, 15 and 17 September 2008
There will be men's, ladies, open and O45's formats. Entry is open to all members of the CCJ. The squash committee will do the seeding and will make every effort to place people in the correct section according to their playing strength.
Entries close Wednesday 3 September and the draw will be on the Squash section of the CCJ website and at Auckland Park reception from 12:00 5 September. Matches will be played from 18:00 each week night
You will have a match on each of these dates; please let me know if there are any times that you can't play and I will try to accommodate your requests.
To enter please send an e-mail with your details to mattheww@ccj.co.za or fill in the entry forms at the courts.
THE CCJ SQUASH PRO SHOP
We stock the following:
- Full range of Tecnifibre racquets and grips
- squash balls and socks.
Ask Matthew for a racquet demo and advice on the right racquet for
you.
CCJ SQUASH SOCIAL EVENINGS
As from 12 March the CCJ Squash section will hold social playing evenings
at Auckland Park at 18:00 on the 2nd Wednesday of every month for all
members. All levels of play will be catered for and there will be doubles
and singles matches.
You do not need to arrange a playing partner prior to the evening
as I will be on hand to arrange matches on the night; just arrive and
you will be guaranteed a game!!!
At his stage booking will not be necessary.
For more information please contact Matthew Woodroffe - mattheww@ccj.co.za

Action aplenty at the world-class
squash centre
Phew, as squash enthusiasts are frequently given to exclaim,
there's been action aplenty in the Club's newly opened world-class squash
centre.
 |
 |
Mike Melvill and
Matthew Woodroffe |
Jacqui Kromberg, Mike Melvill
and Jean Grainger |
Just about as you read this, the Club's double
championships are underway, keenly contested by men, women and juniors
seeded according to their strengths.
Additional evidence of the squash centre's status
as the country's pre-eminent facility was its staging recently of the
South African national doubles championships, as seen on TV and recorded
on the website of Squash SA.
Competitors included several Club members, reflecting
the burgeoning support for doubles squash at Auckland Park.
Simlarly, The Jesters Club - an invitational club
of leading squash players - has been playing the Jester Cup at the new
centre as part of its 50th anniversary celebrations.
Many Jesters, too, are Club members who have been
at the centre of the jovialities that traditionally follow games, sometimes
into the wee hours of darkness.
The new centre also facilitated the Club's entering
of a second league side in the Gauteng league, marking the first time
in 100 years that the Club has played representative competitive squash.
At the time Under the Oaks went to print, the team
was lying second in fourth league, and a veterans' side had won three
of its four games.
Now in its fourth, two-month ‘cycle' the Club's internal
league encompasses six sections whose members play each other at times
of their own choosing.
Although Jan Ludolph and Chris Barry have established
themselves in the higher echelons of the internal competition, Mike
Woodruff is said to be posing a threatening challenge.
When the centre falls quiet among all that action,
you'll find members and children - up to 30 youngsters mainly from The
Ridge School - taking coaching on Tueday and Wednesday afternoons.
Of course, the centre also equipped the squash players
to rejuvenate the Club's single championships after quite an hiatus.
"They left quite a few stiff people walking around
Johannesburg," says Squash Club Chairman, Mike Melvill.
"Judging by the number of people that were at the
courts to watch the finals (and have something to eat and drink in the
lounge) the club champs were a huge success.
In the men's final, Matthew Woodroffe beat Roger Fuller-Good
3-0.
Jean Grainger beat Jacqui Kromberg 3-0 in the ladies'
event.
Squash co-ordinator, Matthew Woodroffe, says arrangements
are also bening made to upgrade the squash component of the Club website
to allow on-line bookings as well as telephone reservartions. Mike Melvill
and Matthew Woodroffe Jacqui Kromberg, Mike Melvill and Jean Grainger.
RESULTS
Mens second
The Country Club Johannesburg Mens second league squad comprising
of Roger Fuller-Good, Matthew Woodroffe, Craig Beart, Andrew Vintcent,
Neil Barrow and Barry Thompson are currently taking part in the Gauteng
league with matches being played every Tuesday. The side is currently
sitting in second place in the league with our "super subs" Andrew Vintcent
and Neil Barrow playing excellent squash and recording some great victories.
After the matches both teams have an excellent supper and a couple of
drinks in the Club Room with our captain Roger Fuller-Good leading by
example...
The CCJ Doubles Club Champs had a superb turnout in June
this year.
We chose a Swiss pairing format ensuring every pair got at least
4 matches.
The number of 17-16 point scores in the final games of matches, especially
in the final stages of the tournament, was indicative of how competitively
matched the pairings were.
Such was the competition that it vaguely surprising that Milton Espley-Jones
was the only competitor who ended up in hospital.
In the end Paul Barrow and Andrew Wallers deservedly won the tournament
by beating the Beart brothers in a hard final.
Next year we would really like to see more of the o65's and ladies
included in the draw.
Some final results were:
- Paul Barrow/Andrew Wallers
- Craig Beart/Mark Beart
- Neil Barrow/Thomas Mullins
- Tony Martin/Matthew Woodroffe
- Michael Melvill/Ian Graham
- Andrew Vintcent/Grant Morris
- Jeremy Manton/Nick Tucker
- Rob Thompson/Chris Grainger
- Carl Rogers/Jan Ludolph
- David Redshaw and Campbell Stuart Watson
- Chris Barry/Dermot Whyte
- David Sawtelle and Richard Preston
Facilities
Auckland Park boasts 9 single squash courts and 4 doubles squash courts.
The National Doubles squash team practise their tactics and game plans
on regular occasions at the CCJ under the watchful eye of team coach
Richard Castle. (Left of picture on left)
The History of Squash
James Zug is a senior writer at Squash Magazine (www.squashmagazine.com)
and is the author of Squash: A History of the Game, published by Scribner
in September 2003.
Back to the Top!
FIRST THERE WAS REAL TENNIS...
The origins of squash are in the ancient game of real
tennis. In the twelfth century in France boys and girls played ball
games in the narrow streets of their villages. They slapped balls along
the awnings or roofs that lined the street or into shop and door openings.
Rules depended on local geography. In time these street games migrated
up to cloistered monasteries. Every Lenten season young brothers strung
a fishing net across the middle of their courtyards and patted a ball
back and forth with their gloved hands. The balls - a patch of leather
with dog hair sewn inside, later cloth stuffed with soil, sawdust, sand
or moss-bruised and cut hands. Monks added webbing to the gloves and
then extended their hand by picking up a stumpy stick, a branch of a
tree, a shepherd's crook. At the end of the fifteenth century the Dutch
invented the racquet.The game was called tennis and it became the national
sport of a dozen European nations.
In 1580 the Venetian ambassador to Henri III of France
walked around Paris counting tennis courts: he stopped at eighteen hundred.
Gambling and violence sadly became the norm (Caravaggio, the Italian
painter, killed a man at a tennis court in Rome in 1606) and tennis
slowly retreated to royal palaces. Lawn tennis, as played by Hewitt
and the Williams sisters, was invented in 1873 in Great Britain as an
outdoor version of real tennis.Tennis begat rackets. In the early eighteenth
century, prisoners at the Fleet, London's notorious debtor's gaol, created
an outdoor version of tennis. It was called rackets, and it involved
no more than smacking a ball against one or two walls. The ball, unsqueezable,
was made from wound cloth and was similar to a golf ball; the racket
was a stretched tennis bat. Soon rackets spread across Great Britain
and was a common pastime as workingmen played in tavern yards and alleys
and schoolboys played outside their classrooms.Britons started building
rackets courts, as opposed to just playing in a convenient corner. These
courts were unadorned affairs, roofless, rustic, usually just one or
two stone walls and a paving stone floor. Inclement weather drove players
toward a court with a roof.
In 1830 the Royal Artillery built the first known
covered racket court at their Woolwich depot. The Marylebone Cricket
Club, the home of cricket, built one in 1844 next to their tennis court
at Lords, and in 1853 Prince's Club opened its historic doors with seven
covered rackets courts. Rackets spread to the colonies. The first covered
rackets court in Canada was put in Halifax in the seventeen-seventies;
in India in 1821; Australia in 1847.
In 1793 Robert Knox, a Scot, put up the first covered
court in America on Allen Street, between Hester and Canal, in lower
Manhattan. A few years later the Allen Street court had a nearby rival
that was called, due to the predominant profession of its membership,
the Butcher's Court.Accompanying rackets was another socially-lubricated
ball and wall game called fives. Named for the five fingers of the hand,
this ancient version of handball was more or less the game of rackets
without the racket. Many men played both sports in the same court. Fives
grew so popular at English public schools that the two leading forms
of the game derived their standards entirely from the quirky spots on
campus where the boys played. Eton fives, first played amid the mossy
drainpipes outside the school chapel at Eton, had a court twenty-five
feet and three inches by fourteen with many buttresses and hazards,
while Rugby fives, created at Rugby School (where the sport of rugby
football also was started), had an unadorned court twenty-eight feet
by eighteen, with side walls that sloped towards the back wall and a
two and a half foot tin on the front wall.
Back to the Top!
THEN THERE WAS FIVES ...
The combination of rackets and fives sparked the creation
of squash at the Harrow School outside London. Harrow boys were addicted
to rackets. The chief place to play at Harrow was in the schoolyard
that surrounded Old Schools, the main school building. One special nook
of the schoolyard was called "The Corner." It had two good
side walls and a front wall with a buttress which dropped the ball straight
down and a waterpipe that might send it anywhere. In 1850 Harrow built
two open-air rackets courts. Court time was hard to get for younger
boys.
They had to be content to play in the tiny, stone-walled
yards at their boarding houses or in village alleys. The yards and alleys,
like the Corner, boasted peculiar hazards: water pipes, chimneys, ledges,
doors, footscrapers, wired windows and fiendishly sloping ground. Split-second
decisions and speedy hand-eye coordination were essential. Rackets,
with its long, heavy bat and bullet-hard ball, was difficult for an
inexperienced boy to learn in such cramped conditions.
With typical English flair, the young boys at Harrow
invented something new. Rubber had just come into use and Harrow boys
grabbed a rubber ball, sawed off the butt of their racquets and played
a slower, easier game in their house yards. This bastardised version
of racquets was called "baby racquets" or "soft racquets"
or "softer." (In those days the word "racquets"
was spelled properly.) Baby rackets was perfect for the Harrow boys.
On 20 January 1865 Harrow officially opened a new complex of rackets
and fives courts.The boys loved the new rackets court (it is still in
use at Harrow). The fives courts had a mixed reception. The four new
Eton fives courts immediately were filled with activity, but the three
new Rugby fives courts never saw any fives play. Instead, Harrow boys
jumped on and played their new game of baby rackets. And this game became
the game of squash.
Back to the Top!
SQUASH SOON SPREAD
Squash soon spread. Other public schools, notably
Elstree, picked it up. In 1883 the first private court was built by
Vernon Harcourt, Harrow class of 1855, at his home along the Cherwell
in Oxford. It was thirty-eight by twenty feet, with a tin of thirty
inches. They played with a black ball, a red ball and ball with a hole
in it. Other early courts ran the gamut. At Lord's, the squash court
was forty-two feet by twenty-four, with a twenty-eight inch tin; at
Cambridge they divided a sixty by thirty racquets court into three squash
courts, each quite tiny; at the Royal Automobile Club in London there
was a court that was exactly thirty-two by eighteen and a half-the size
more common in America; Marlborough House, a royal residence, also had
an American width until the mid-thirties; at Queen's Club, one court,
built in 1905 and dubbed "the Long Court," was thirty-five
by eighteen.
In the 1920s the Bath Club in London became the nursery
for squash in England. Lord Desborough built a beautiful court that
was noted for its outstanding lighting and launched the Bath Club Cup,
a squash league for London clubs. League squash greatly increased enthusiasm
for the fledgling sport, and squash in Great Britain owed its success
in large part to the Bath Cup competitions of the twenties.Administratively,
squash had a slow start in Great Britain.
In April 1907 the Tennis, Rackets & Fives Association
was founded at Queen's and a squash sub-committee was formed.
In 1912 this sub-committee issued a preliminary set
of rules. Court length and width was considered a matter of local opinion.
Cement or stone were preferred to wood for the materials of the court.
Two types of balls were the best: "What is required is a fast ball,
that bounces well but not too high, and does not fly about: a very small
hard solid ball or a medium-size thin rubber hollow ball, without a
hole."
As far as the rules of play were concerned, the sub-committee
recommended flexibility. Serving could be either one serve or two, courts
could have a cut line on the front wall or not and most delightfully,
the man returning could have the right of "refusing a service he
does not like". The sub-committee had no power to enforce its recommendations
and another eleven years passed without any official standards.
In January 1923 the Royal Automobile Club hosted a
meeting of delegates from English clubs where squash was played and
formed a "Squash Rackets Representative Committee." The committee
chose the slowest of the half dozen different kinds of balls then in
vogue as the standard ball and declared the Bath Club court, thirty
two by twenty-one feet, as the standard for English squash.
In December 1928 the Squash Rackets Association was
formed to run squash in Great Britain.The SRA immediately began slowing
the ball down further. While the Bath courts served as the model for
English squash, the Bath ball, as large and fast as an American ball,
was deemed far too large and fast for English sensibilities.
The officials chose the most inert ball available
and then in a series of incremental changes, reduced it even more. Between
1930 and 1934 the association cut the standard ball's speed almost by
half.
Back to the Top!
GREAT BRITAIN
By the time Great Britain formally codified their
squash standards in 1923, squash in America had been played under a
different standard for two decades. The first squash court in North
America appeared at St. Paul's School in New Hampshire in 1884. Jay
Conover, an avid rackets player, had attended Columbia University in
New York with Hyde Clark, a graduate of Harrow, and Clark had told Conover
about an enjoyable adaptation of rackets that was popular at his alma
mater. Conover's four squash courts, built outside a building with two
rackets courts, were open to the air. Any pupil who annually paid one
dollar could use them.
In 1900 Alfred Ellis, a Englishman who was the rackets
professional at the Racquet Club of Philadelphia, put in a squash court
at his club. Built entirely of wood, it was perched high in the rafters
of the half story in the three and one-half story clubhouse. It measured
thirty-one feet by seventeen and a half.
In 1902, Jimmy Potter, a St. Paul's graduate and president
of the club, made a dramatic decision to divide up the south rackets
courts into three squash courts. Each court measured thirty-one and
a half feet by seventeen and a half and were made of cement, except
for a wooden front wall. The total cost was $1,500.
Within months squash dispersed around Philadelphia.
Racquet Club members built squash courts at their homes. In 1903 Merion
Cricket Club started playing squash on their three courts. Two city
cricket clubs, Philadelphia Cricket in Chestnut Hill and Germantown
Cricket in Manheim, erected courts at the same time.
In 1903 the Racquet Club offered a cup for the winner
of an six-club team competition. The league was so successful that the
Racquet Club sponsored a "Pennsylvania State Championship."
In 1904 the leaders of the inter-club league, meeting at the Racquet
Club, founded the United States Squash Racquets Association, the first
national squash body in the world.The USSRA immediately set the standard
squash court measurements at thirty-one and a half feet by sixteen feet
three inches, with a twenty-four inch tin. Scoring was originally first-to-fifteen,
hand-in, hand-out, like rackets and best two of three games. "Eternal
watchfulness is the price of success in squash," wrote Frederick
R. Toombs in a 1904 book on squash published in New York. "Cultivate
variety in your style of play. You will thus keep your opponent in an
uncertain frame of mind.
Mix the strong and weak strokes, according to your
adversary's position. Let the side walls and back wall do their share
of the work, and at times you will find a well-placed cut stroke just
the feature needed to win the rally. Learn that poetry of motion may
be expressed by the squash stroke."
In 1907 the USSRA ran its first men's national championship
In 1911 the USSRA changed the scoring rules to best three out of five,
and one could score a point whether serving or not. This rule was adopted
by the British until in 1926 when they switched to a nine point, hand-in,
hand-out system. In 1920 the USSRA changed its standard to thirty-two
feet by eighteen and one-half.
Back to the Top!
AROUND THE WORLD
Around the world squash appeared in a tremendous variety
of guises. The first bonafide court in Canada was built in 1904 at the
St. John's Tennis Club in Newfoundland. Sir Leonard Outerbridge, whose
two brothers were on the club's building committee, sent the proper
dimensions from Marlborough College in England where he was studying.
The dimensions were, again, of a fives court, with no back wall.
In 1911 three clubs, the Montreal Racquet Club, the
Toronto Racquet Club and the Hamilton Squash Racquets Club, formed the
Canadian Squash Racquets Association. It soon standardized a thirty-four
by nineteen court (with a twenty-two inch tin). In 1921 the CSRA made
formal application to the USSRA for affiliation and a year later switched
to the American standards. In 1906 the Johannesburg Country Club built
an open-air court that was wider than the American size.
In 1910 South Africa created a national association
and eventually, because of significant heat and altitude in many parts
of the country, standardized a wide court and slow ball. The Sudan Club
in Khartoum had six courts, all unroofed. Government House in Dar es
Salaam boasted a fine, open-air court, with a stone floor. The St. James's
Barracks in Port of Spain, Trinidad had one open-air, concrete-floored
court that was American-sized in width. In Kenya the Nairobi Club had
two English standard courts made from knotless cedar, but the Muthiaga
Club nearby had stone floors and an American width.In Stockholm the
first courts were made with walls of powdered marble. New Zealand played
in an English court with an American ball, a combination that was not
resolved until the thirties.
In France the first courts were at the famous court
tennis club Societe Sportive du Jeu de Paume, where in the late nineteen-twenties
Pierre Etchebaster turned a rackets court into four tiny squash courts,
each with a cement floor. In 1930 Siemens, the electronics company,
built four courts at its factory in Berlin.In 1913 a rackets court at
the Melbourne Club was split into two squash courts.
In the early 1920s Mr. Bjelke-Petersen, later a uncle
of the premier of Queensland, Sir Joe Bjelke-Petersen, built a court
in New South Wales. In 1927 the Royal Melbourne Tennis Club built a
court that was nearly as big as a rackets court. It was not until 1931
that an Australian championship was inaugurated, and Australia officially
went with the English size. In 1934 the Squash Rackets Association of
Australia was formed and three years later both Victoria and New South
Wales formed their own provincial associations.
Back to the Top!
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION COMMENCES
Squash reached a tipping point in the twenties. No
longer an obscure pastime for schoolboys, it had national championships
and league play and standard rules. International play started in 1922
when the Lapham Cup was first contested between the U.S. and Canada.
The Lapham is a fifteen-man amateur competition.
In 1924 England sent a team to the third Lapham Cup
in Philadelphia, inaugurating intercontinental play. Timmy Roberts,
a forty-six year-old Army captain, won both the U.S. and Canadian nationals
while on tour that year.A dramatic rise in popularity came after the
Second World War. In particular, Australia, in the midst of a boom of
commercial squash clubs, started an Antipodal renaissance. In the early
1960s Australian men won every international match in two tours of England,
and in London in 1964 Australian women beat Great Britain in their first
international match.
In January 1967 representatives from seven nations
(Australia, Great Britain, Egypt, India, New Zealand, Pakistan and South
Africa) met in London and formed the International Squash Rackets Federation.
Later that year Australia hosted the first ISRF men's championships.
In 1969 the U.S. and Canada were admitted, despite
the different standard of play in North America. Five nations came to
the world championships in South Africa in 1973; ten to England in 1975
and fourteen to Australia in 1979. In 1980 the ISRF opened their championships
to professionals. In 1980 Sweden hosted the first world junior championships.
In 1985 the Women's International Squash Federation, which was founded
in 1976 and had held four world championships, merged into the ISRF.
In 1992 the ISRF changed its name to the World Squash Federation.
The WSF was integral to the acceptance of squash as
a medal sport in the Commonwealth Games, where it was first played in
1998, as well as the Pan-American Games, where it was first played in
1995, the Asian Games and the All Africa Games. Today the WSF has one
hundred and nineteen member nations and is recognized as the governing
body for the sport by the International Olympic Committee. The WSF is
responsible for the rules of the game, refereeing and coaching standards
and specifications for courts and equipment. In addition, the WSF maintains
a calendar of world championship events for men, women, juniors and
masters players in both singles and doubles. As a major force behind
the development and growth of squash, the WSF is at the forefront of
the many exciting aspects of the game today and tomorrow. Jahangir Khan,
the ten-time British Open champion and six-time World Open champion,
is president and Ted Wallbutton is the executive director.
Back to the Top!
THE RISE OF THE PROFESSIONAL GAME
Professionalism has always been the public tip of
the squash iceberg. It began in 1904 when the first bonafide professional
tournament in the world was held at the Huntingdon Valley Country Club
outside Philadelphia. There were six entries, and Alfred Ellis beat
John Friel 3-1 in the final. In 1914 Jock Soutar, the world champion
in rackets, won a pro round-robin in Montreal. Two years later the USSRA
crowned him professional champion of America after he beat Bill Ganley
two matches to one in a three-leg, two-city contest. Soutar won $1,000.
Ganley won nothing. Four years later Soutar defended his title against
Otto Glockler. In 1925 Soutar stepped down from his throne.
In 1928 a group of American teaching pros formed the
United States Professional Squash Racquets Association. In 1930 the
USPSRA organized its first national tournament, held in Boston. Pro
squash received a boost in 1954 when the U.S. Open was started in New
York.
In 1966 it amalgamated with a newer Canadian Open
to form the North American Open.In 1978 the professional hardball association
was renamed the World Professional Squash Association.
In the 1980s the WPSA had a continent-wide pro tour
that reached more than half a million dollars in prize money and visited
more than thirty cities. Americans like Mark Talbott and Ned Edwards,
Canadians like Michael Desaulniers and Clive Caldwell, Mexicans like
Marion Sanchez and the perennial squash giant Pakistani-born, Toronto-based
Sharif Khan dominated the tour. Pro squash started England in 1907.
Charles Read, the Queen's pro, beat C. Bannister, the Bath pro, at the
Bath Club 15-5, 15-13 and defended his title as English champion three
more times until 1928.
In 1930 that the British Open was started and professionals
had a more formal stage to present their wares. But it was an amateur,
Amr Bey from Egypt, who dominated the early British Opens, winning five
and earning another when no one challenged him. After Bey came his compatriot
Mahmoud Kerim, the only player to win the British Open when it was both
a two-man challenge tournament and a regular open draw.
In 1951 Hashim Khan, a thirty-seven year-old Pakistani,
came to Great Britain and destroyed Kerim in the finals, 9-5, 9-0, 9-0.
Hashim, his brother Azam, cousin Roshan and nephew Mohibullah won twelve
Opens in a row.Jonah Barrington, a six-time British Open champion and
the first man since Amr Bey to win both the Open and the British amateur
championships, was the first pro to cut himself off from the clubs and
earn his entire living from tournaments, exhibitions and clinics. In
1970 he organized a five-man barnstorming tour of Asia that led to the
formation of the International Squash Professionals Association in 1973
and the gradual creation of a viable pro tour. The ISPA launched a World
Open championship in 1976. Heather McKay and Geoff Hunt, two legendary
Australians, won their draws. McKay was famous for not losing a squash
match for eighteen straight years, and Hunt, a seven-time British Open
champion, was renowned for his amazing physical and mental endurance.
Other dominant pros were Australians like Ken Hiscoe, Dean Williams,
Rodney and Brett Martin and Chris Dittmar, New Zealand's Ross Norman
and Englishmen like Gawain Briars, now Executive Director of the PSA,
and Phil Kenyon.
No doubt though, the most exciting group of players
came from Pakistan. Following in the footsteps of Hashim Khan were such
giants as Hiddy Jahan, Gogi Alauddin and Qamar Zaman (who won the 1975
British Open), and the 1980s were dominated by Jahangir Khan and the
1990s by Jansher Khan. Both Jahangir and Jansher have equal merit in
any discussion of the greatest player ever.In 1993 the WPSA and the
ISPA merged to form the Professional Squash Association. In 2002 the
PSA held more than fifty events with a total prize money of nearly $2
million. The tour visits its usual spots in Europe, Asia and North America,
but it also holds major events in exciting locales around South America,
Africa and Dubai and Qatar in the Middle East. Pro women's squash originated
with the American Women's Squash Association, founded in the mid-1970s.
In 1985 the Women's International Squash Professional Association came
into being and built up a viable circuit. The top early players were
Susan Devoy of New Zealand and Vicki Hoffman of Australia; Devoy won
eight British Opens. In the 1990s Michelle Martin of Australia won six
British Opens in a row. In 2002 WISPA has a $750,000 tour on all six
continents.
Back to the Top!
SQUASH DOUBLES
Doubles began at the Racquet Club of Philadelphia
in 1907 when Fred Tompkins, the tennis and rackets pro at the club,
erected a forty-five feet by twenty-five court. In the 1930s dozens
of clubs across America built courts and an amateur circuit of tournaments
sprung up everywhere from St. Louis to Chicago to Denver to Toronto.
In 1933 the U.S. squash association started a men's and women's national
championship. Pro doubles started with the founding of the Heights Casino
Open in 1938 in Brooklyn, New York, but it was not until the WPSA tour
began in the late 1970s that it took off. In the 1980s the pro doubles
circuit included six or eight events with a prize money of around $100,000;
in the 1990s this increased to ten or twelve events and $150,000.In
2000 the tour's players formed the International Squash Doubles Association.
In 2001 the Kellner Cup in New York had a prize money purse of $100,000.
In 2002-03 there were twenty ISDA tournaments with a total prize money
of $700,000, including the $130,000 Briggs Cup in Rye, New York.
Today there are a hundred and twenty-five proper hardball
doubles courts in North America. There is one in Tijuana, Mexico and
three in Asia at the Royal Bangkok Sports Club in Thailand, the Tanglin
Club in Singapore and the Raintree Club in Kuala Lumpur. In 1935 three
courts were laid out following USSRA specifications at the St. John's
Wood Squash Club, Prince's Club and Ladies' Carlton Club in London and
the Edinburgh Sports Club in Scotland.
Starting in 1937 the Squash Rackets Association held
national doubles tournaments for both amateurs and professionals and
England played Scotland in an annual Test match in doubles. The Second
World War led to the destruction of the St. John's Wood and Ladies Carlton
courts and Prince's closed, but Edinburgh still maintains its hardball
doubles court.Today softball doubles is the norm outside North America.
In 1988 the Royal Automobile Club constructed two
softball doubles courts at their Woodcote Park clubhouse outside London.
The courts were thirty-two feet by twenty-five, which was proclaimed
the standard softball doubles width. With sliding wall technology made
common by the German-based court building company ASB, the inchoate
game appeared around the world. In 1997 the first World Softball Doubles
Championships were held in Hong Kong.
The biggest showcase was the Commonwealth Games. At
both Kuala Lumpur in 1998 and Manchester in 2002, men's, women's and
mixed doubles were medal events.
Back to the Top!
THE FUTURE IS BRIGHT ...
The future of squash has never been brighter. Technology
has forever shattered the inherent limitations of this racquet, ball
and wall game. Racquets are much lighter and stronger today, making
the game more exciting.
The ball is now consistent throughout the world. Canada
adopted softball standards in the late 1970s and the U.S. and Mexico
changed in the early 1990s. The all-glass portable court came into existence
in the early 1980s. This greatly expanded gallery size for pro events
which helped fuel more sponsorship. Television also became a reality
with the glass walls. Because of portable courts, squash tournaments
have been staged in stunning locations: in Grand Central Terminal, New
York's famous train station; in Canary Wharf, London's flashy shopping
center; in Royal Albert Hall; at Symphony Hall, the landmark auditorium
in Boston; and most famously at the base of the Pyramids at Giza outside
Cairo. These high-profile events are the leading edge of the twenty-first
century squash juggernaut.
The game is global. A company from Washington, D.C.
is building courts in St. Petersburg. Most balls were made in Barnsley,
Great Britain until the early 2000s when production was moved to the
Philippines. Racquets are sold from Denver and London. Germany has gone
from a dozen courts in 1973 to six thousand and boasts two million active
players.
More than twenty nations have players ranked in the
top one hundred in the men's world rankings.In not quite one hundred
and forty years squash has gone from a schoolboy pastime to the most
exhilarating, exhausting and explosive game in the world.
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