|
European Junior U19 Team Squash Championships 2008,
20-23 March, Stavanger, Norway
Final:
[2] ENGLAND bt [1] FRANCE 2-1
Joe Lee bt Gregoire Marche 9-1, 9-2, 9-6 (46m)
Neil Cordell bt Lucas Vauzelle 9-7, 9-6, 9-5 (64m)
Victoria Lust lost to Camille Serme 0-9, 2-9
3rd place play-off:
[4] GERMANY bt [3] SWITZERLAND 2-1
Florian Silbernagl lost to Nicolas Mueller 5-9, 0-9, 2-9
Raphael Kandra bt Reiko Peter 4-9, 9-1, 9-1, 9-6
Sina Wall bt Jasmin Ballman 9-4, 9-3, 9-0
5th place play-off:
[6] WALES bt [8] SCOTLAND 2-1
Hywel Robinson bt Lyall Paterson 9-5, 9-3, 9-2
David Haley lost to Christopher Ferguson 5-9, 5-9, 8-10
Natalie Pritchard bt Lisa Aitken 3-9, 9-3, 9-3, 9-3
7th place play-off:
[5] CZECH REPUBLIC bt [10] NETHERLANDS 2-1
Petr Martin bt Rick Penders 9-4, 9-0, 9-4
Roman Svec bt Tim van der Pluijm 9-0, 9-0, 9-4
Klara Janoskova lost to Milou van der Heijden 9-5, 5-9, 5-9
9th place play-off:
[7] BELGIUM bt [9] DENMARK 2-1
Sam van Brusselen bt Casper Grauballe 9-6, 5-9, 9-3, 9-3
Robin Schreurs lost to Philip Tran 7-9, 10-9, 2-9, 3-9
Toke van Wesemael bt Sally Skarrenborg 9-5, 7-9, 9-5, 9-0
11th place play-off:
[12] SPAIN bt [11] FINLAND 2-1
Carlos Cornes Ribadas lost to Henrik Mustonen 0-9, 0-9, 1-9
Damian Arosa Rodriguez bt Ville Hiltunen 9-7, 9-3, 9-0
Carla Fernandez Vazquez bt Nina Saari 9-1, 9-0, 9-0
13th place play-off:
[13] SWEDEN bt [14] IRELAND 2-1
Christoffer Ohlsson lost to Neil Martin 6-9, 9-7, 9-4, 2-9, 4-9
Johan Detter bt Colm Dolan 9-7, 9-2, 9-1
Eira Mooney bt Sarah Corcoran 9-2, 9-7, 9-3
15th place play-off: [15] NORWAY bye
England Retain Title In
Dramatic European Junior Final
In a
dramatic climax to the 25th staging of the European
Junior U19 Team Squash Championships in the Norwegian city of
Stavanger, England upset top seeds France 2/1 to win the
European Squash Federation event title for the 23rd
time.
The
team championships proved to be highly competitive, with 15 teams
battling it out over four intense days - with favourites France
hoping to achieve a ‘grand slam’ after winning both the earlier
individual titles, but facing determined opposition from second
seeds England, third seeds Switzerland, and Germany,
the fourth seeds.
"In
an inspired change of strategy, England rested their squad number
one Adrian Waller and fielded a revised team of Joe Lee, Neil
Cordell and Victoria Lust for the final against France," commented
ESF Technical Director Martin Wren.
Joe Lee, the recently-crowned British
Junior champion from Surrey, opened proceedings in the final -
taking on in-form Frenchman Gregoire Marche. The
18-year-old from Aix-on-Provence arrived in Norway fresh from his
first triumph in a PSA Tour event in Austria - then claimed an
unexpected triumph in the men's Individual championship before
extending his unbeaten record through the team event.
But
Lee, son of former England Junior international Danny Lee,
was in impressive form against Marche, defeating the European
champion 9-1, 9-2, 9-6 in 46 minutes. "Joe was in total command
over Greg in what was an object lesson in how to play squash," added
Wren.
Yorkshireman Neil Cordell faced France's Lucas Vauzelle
in the second match - and battled for more than an hour against his
17-year-old opponent to win 9-7, 9-6, 9-5 in 64 minutes to secure
the coveted title for England.
"Neil and Lucas played a really hard match with Neil making fewer
mistakes but also deserving to win by his ability to get back to
basics when it mattered - playing tight wall shots in order to
recover seemingly poor situations," explained Wren.
In
the best-of-three dead rubber which followed, France gained small
consolation when Camille Serme, the record three-time women's
European champion, despatched Victoria Lust 9-0, 9-2.
England team manager David Campion was delighted with his
team's performance: "The squad worked really hard throughout the
event and conducted themselves extremely professionally. We were completely aware of how strong France were - and, to
their immense credit, Joe and Neil produced the goods when it
mattered in the final.
"The
competition in this event gets stronger every year - but we were
focussed throughout and handled the situation really well," added
the jubilant Campion.
In
the play-off for third place, Germany upset Switzerland 2/1 - but
fourth-placed Switzerland were able to celebrate their first finish
in the top four since 2002.
Wales beat British rivals Scotland
2/1 in the play-off for fifth place. "Wales deserve special
mention – finishing fifth overall with a very young squad, all of
whom are eligible to play next year," added ESF delegate Wren. "Two
of the squad, Tesni Evans and Sam Fenwick, are only 15
years old!"
But
Scotland's sixth place finish also represented their best result for
more than ten years.
"The
European U19 Championships played over the past nine days in
Stavanger have proved to be an outstanding success," stated Martin
Wren. "A success for Stavanger who are celebrating the title of
European City of Culture, 2008; a success for the hard working
organisers, for the players, coaches and supporters; and for ESF for
whom this is the flagship Junior event.
"The
Championships were organised by Norges Squash Forbund, and ESF owe a
huge vote of thanks to President Mike Off, General Secretary
Reidun Ribesen, as well as John Eriksen and the army
of volunteers who helped make these Championships so successful.
Thanks, too, to Jens Kragholm, the Championships Referee from
Denmark.
"In
summary, this was an excellent event, thoroughly enjoyed by players
and supporters alike. The ESF is proud that this event has provided
a platform for European junior squash at the highest level and we
look forward to more of the same when the event is hosted by Germany
next year," Wren concluded.
|