|
WORLD SQUASH FEDERATION
ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTY YEARS OF SQUASH
Early Days |
Squash in America |
123 Other Nations |
Pakistan |
World Scene
Also available as a pdf
document
For
over 1000 years man has invented and enjoyed a variety of games
played by hitting a ball with either a closed fist - as in
“fives” or “bunch of fingers” - or with some form of bat or
racket. Around the year 1148 the French played “le Paume”,
meaning “the palm of the hand”, which developed into Jeu de
Paume, Real Tennis, Royal Tennis or, if you play the sport,
simply Tennis. At sometime in the early 19th century this
obsession with rackets and balls spawned another variety of the
sport in the unlikely birthplace of the Fleet Prison in London.
The prisoners in “The Fleet”, mainly debtors, took their
exercise by hitting a ball against walls, of which there were
many, with rackets and so started the game of “Rackets”. Rackets
progressed, by some strange route, to Harrow and other select
English schools about 1820 and it was from this source that our
own sport of Squash, or Squash Rackets, developed.
Squash was invented in Harrow school around 1830, when the
pupils discovered that a punctured Rackets ball, which
"squashed" on impact with the wall, produced a game with a
greater variety of shots and required much more effort on the
part of the players, who could not simply wait for the ball to
bounce back to them as with Rackets. The variant proved popular
and in 1864 the first four Squash courts were constructed at the
school and Squash was officially founded as a sport in its own
right.
In those early days Squash, as with all other sports, was
without any form of international standardisation and it was
inevitable that slight variations in the way it was played, and
the equipment used, would occur. Luckily only two main streams
of activity followed, one in England with its 21 feet wide
courts and “soft” ball and the other in North America, with its
18½ feet wide courts and “hard” ball and with both courts having
the same length of 32 feet the universality of Squash was not
seriously challenged. We will look at these two branches
separately and also at the way in which Squash spread to almost
every nation in the world.
EARLY DAYS IN ENGLAND
The first recorded reference to "Squash", other than in Harrow
school, appeared in 1890 in the English book "The Badminton
Library of Sports and Pastimes" written by the Duke of Beaufort.
Eustace Miles, a world championship at both Tennis and Rackets,
wrote the first book on Squash in 1901; stating that the sport
was enjoyed by thousands of players in various parts of the
world. By that time there were courts in schools and
universities in England and some also in private houses. The
first professional Squash Championship was held in 1920 in
England, when C.R. Read (Queens Club) beat A.W.B. Johnson (RAC
Club).
In 1923 H.A.L. Rudd, writing in "Baily's Magazine", forecast
that Rackets would lose many players to Squash with the arrival
of the first English Amateur Championships. He was concerned at
this prospect as he considered Rackets to be a "manlier" game;
Squash afforded a good "sweat" but did not demand the same skill
as Rackets, in his opinion. Rudd's forecast proved to be only
too correct as Squash grew rapidly and soon left its parent
sport far behind in popularity.
As Squash play developed so did its administrative structure.
The first discrete national associations to be formed were the
United States Squash Racquets Association in 1907 and the
Canadian Squash Racquets Association in 1911. In England the
game was regulated by a Squash sub committee of the Tennis and
Rackets Association from 1908 until it gained full status as the
Squash Rackets Association in 1928.
A court built at the Bath Club in London at the beginning of the
20th century was chosen as the model for the standard size of a
Squash court, 32 feet by 21 feet or 9.75 metres by 6.4 metres,
much smaller that the court for Rackets which measures 60 feet
by 30 feet (18.3 metres by 9.1 metres). The British dimensions
were proposed in 1911, but not ratified until 1923. The
point-a-rally scoring system to 15 was used universally in
Squash until 1926 when the current hand-in, hand-out system to 9
points was introduced outside north America. The American
hardball game, however, continued to be played to 15 points and
this system was also adopted for the men's professional circuit
in 1991 in an effort to shorten the matches.
In 1933 the great Egyptian player F.D. Amr Bey, won the first of
his five British Open Championships, then seen as the World
Championships. He was followed in his achievement by M.A. Karim
of Egypt who won the title four times from 1947 to 1950 and then
the dominating Khan dynasty from Pakistan; Hashim (1951-1958),
Roshan (1957), Azam (1959-1962), Mohibullah (1963), Jahangir
(1982-1992) and Jansher (1993-1994).
The Women's British Open commenced even earlier than the Men's;
with Miss J.I. Cave winning the title in 1922. Until 1960 the
title belonged solely to English players, with Janet Morgan
(later Shardlow) winning 10 times between 1950 and 1958. She was
followed by the most famous woman Squash player ever, the
Australian Heather McKay, who dominated the sport from 1966 to
1977 and remained undefeated throughout her playing career. Her
successor was the New Zealander, Susan Devoy, who won the title
8 times between 1984 and 1992.
Perhaps the players who had the most impact on the development
of the sport were Jonah Barrington (Ireland) and Geoff Hunt
(Australia). They dominated Squash between the late 1960's and
early 1980's, capturing the imagination of sportsmen and women
everywhere and starting a boom in the sport which raised the
number of courts to 46000 worldwide and the number of players to
over 15 million by 1994.
SQUASH IN AMERICA
Squash was certainly being played in Canada before 1882, as it
was then that James P Conover, the Headmaster of St. Paul’s
School in Concord, New Hampshire, USA, saw it being played in
Montreal. He thought it would be a perfect sport for his boys
and wrote in the November 1882 edition of the school magazine
“It is the universal experience, that for health and for the
highest perfection in the game, the average boy or man should
play but one rubber a day”. He went on to describe the new
Squash complex and its 21 feet wide courts and compare the game
favourably with Rackets.
“This building will cover an area of fifty feet by sixty, and
will have a height of about seventy feet from the ground to the
eaves. The ball used in such courts is about the size of a
walnut, of rubber, and hollow, with a hole in it to prevent
breaking. The so-called “squash-ball court” recommended itself
to the club for many reasons; such courts are largely used in
English public schools; cost of construction is much less; fewer
racquet bats are broken and fewer balls destroyed; fewer heads
are cracked and fewer knees and elbows barked; the danger from
being hit by the ball (quite an item among young players) is
cancelled; and for all intents and purposes the game is the same
and produces just as good players.”
Although the International, or “soft”, ball was harder and
bouncier than it is now it was not ideally suited to the cold
courts in Concord where the temperature was often below freezing
point during play. A harder rubber ball was developed and found
to be more suited to slightly narrower courts, leading to the
18½ feet court, 19 feet court and other experimental widths. It
was not until 1924 that the court specifications were codified,
at which time it was decided to standardise on the 18½ feet
width and a 17 inch ’ tin’ rather than the 19 inch variety used
for the soft ball. By 1929 official court plans were being sold
by the USSRA and the hardball game was brought into controlled
growth.
The United States Squash Racquets Association was founded in
1907 and it was in that year also that the first recognised
National Championship for Squash in any country was held with
John A Miskey of Philadelphia winning the American title, a feat
he repeated in 1908 and 1910. After Miskey the National title
was won six times by Stanley W Pearson, also from Philadelphia,
between 1915 and 1923, with his son Stanley Junior continuing
the tradition by taking it in 1948. Other great national players
from Philadelphia included Charles M P Brinton (1941/42/46/47)
and G Diehl Mateer Jr (1954/56/61) with Henri R Salaun from
Boston winning four times between 1995 and 1961. Victor
Niederhoffer (New York) dominated the 1970s with 5 victories,
Kenton Jernigan (Newport, Rhode Island) recorded three titles in
the 1980s and Mexican Hector Barragan won five consecutive
titles from 1990 to 1994.
In the early days most of the Women’s National titles were won
by players from Boston, Philadelphia or Wilmington, interspersed
by the occasional English tourist winner, such as Susan Noel
(1933), Margot Lumb (1935) and the great Janet Morgan (1949 &
1955). Margaret Howe of Boston won three times between 1929 and
1934, while two Philadelphians, Anne Page and Cecile Bowes won
four times each between 1936 and 1948. Thereafter one player or
another dominated the scene for several years; Betty (Howe)
Constable from Philadelphia winning four titles (1956-1959),
Margaret Varner (Wilmington) four (1960-1963), Gretchen Spruance
(Wilmington) five (1973-1978) with the 1980s totally dominated
by Alicia McConnell (Brooklyn) with seven titles (1982-1988) and
Demer Holleran from Hanover NH taking over in 1989 to remain
undefeated for seven years until 1995.
With the establishment of a Professional Tour, to which clubs
were encouraged to send their teaching pro., a list of world
famous names acquired US titles from the mid-fifties - Hashim
Khan (4 wins), Mahmoud Kerim (4), Mohibullah Khan (5), Sharif
Khan (9), Mark Talbott (5), Jahangir Khan (2) and Jansher Khan
(3).
Squash played with a hard ball on an 18½ feet wide court was the
only form of the sport played in the USA until the mid-1980s,
but then growing exposure to the “International” game resulted
in some 21 feet wide courts being built and the international,
“soft”, ball being used on both the wide and narrow courts.
Additionally, the USSRA recognised a 20 feet width as being
acceptable for International play, this width being derived from
the increasing trend to convert Racquetball courts to Squash
use. In an incredibly short period of time in the early 1990s
Squash in the USA changed from being overwhelmingly “hardball”
to predominantly “softball”, with the only available monitor of
the trend, ball sales, indicating that by 1996 around 80% of all
play was International. Quite why this change happened, and why
so quickly, is still being debated but there is little doubt
that a new generation of players is now experiencing the love
affair with international squash which happened in all other
nations and finding it preferable to the higher racket skills
demanded by the hardball game.
The North American player was also the first to appreciate the
virtues of Doubles Squash, with the hardball being used on a
court measuring 45 feet long by 25 feet wide. The first National
Doubles Championships were held in 1933 and hardball Doubles
continues to thrive even though the singles version now holds
only a minority of play.
AUSTRALIA, GERMANY AND 123 OTHER NATIONS
Squash spread rapidly in its early days and the major growth
areas were wherever British forces were stationed. South Africa,
India, Pakistan, Egypt, Australia, New Zealand and many other
countries learned their Squash from the military and soon
adopted it as their own. Probably the most successful Squash
nation of all time, Australia, had its Squash seed planted
through contact with the military.
Although the first Squash courts in Australia were established
in 1913, at the Melbourne Club in Victoria, there was no
official Squash association until 1934 although top players had
been engaged in ad hoc club tournaments since 1927. During 1934
a group of players decided that local administrative pressure
and the need to liaise with interstate and overseas
organisations demanded an official body and the Squash Rackets
Association of Australia (SRAA) was founded, although its main
tasks remained locally orientated in the Melbourne area. Even
when the first Australian Championships were held, for men in
1931 and women in 1932, they were, in reality, State
Championships for Victoria. The SRA of Victoria was formed in
1937.
In New South Wales the first court was built just after the
first World War, by Mr. Bjelke-Petersen, the uncle of the former
Queensland Premier, Sir Joe Bjelke-Petersen. The New South Wales
SRA was formed in 1937 and the first pennant competition in
Sydney commenced in July 1939.
But it was in the 1960s that Squash started to really take off
in Australia. Greater commercial development came into the sport
and public Squash centres were built all over the country,
bringing the game to a much wider audience. This growth brought
amazing international success with many of the world’s best
players coming from the Australian Squash scene. Heather McKay,
Ken Hiscoe, Geoff Hunt, Vicki Cardwell, Steve Bowditch, Rhonda
Thorne and, more recently, Michelle and Rodney Martin all become
World Squash Champions at senior level and Peter Nance, Chris
Robertson, Robyn Lambourne, Sarah Fitz-Gerald and Rachael
Grinham achieved the same distinction at junior level. Hunt was
World Champion seven times and won eight British Open titles
while Heather McKay was the most successful Squash player of all
time, being undefeated in international competition for an
astounding 19 years.
In 1976 the headquarters of the SRAA were transferred to
Queensland and merged with the Australian Women’s SRA to form
the ASRA in 1986, its name being changed to Squash Australia in
1990.
In Germany Squash was born twice! Its first cradle was in Berlin
in 1930 when the first four courts were built by Dr. Ernst von
Siemens, head of the technology department of the electronics
company which bore his name, and he started regular company
staff activities and even foreign competitions on the
“wall-play-halls”. Other courts followed, but during wartime
they were all used for a variety of other purposes and it was
not until 1978 that the Siemens courts were again used by the
“Berlin Wallball Game Club”.
The initiative for the rebirth came from Christhof Viscount
Vitzthum who had discovered the sport in Australia, heard about
the Siemens courts by accident and started to promote Squash and
bring the courts back into use. But an even earlier start had
been made in Hamburg by a merchant, Henning Harders, who erected
three courts following an infection by the Squash bug in
Australia and it was a group of Hamburg players who founded the
German SRA in 1973 and sent a team to the European Team
Championships in Stockholm during 1974.
Two years after the German SRA was founded the first National
Championships were held and within a few years there were over
6000 courts and 2 million players in the nation - the most
spectacular growth of Squash anywhere in the world.
Germany celebrated their twenty-fifth anniversary in 1998 by
bringing the Women’s World Championships to Stuttgart.
Many other nations experienced tremendous growth in Squash,
starting slowly at the beginning of the century and then gaining
momentum over the past thirty years. In each country the basic
story is the same. A group of enthusiasts start to play and
promote the game which, because of its inherent qualities of
intense exercise coupled with all-absorbing competition., grows
rapidly and becomes a major sport in the land. The formula which
made Squash grow in its traditional homelands is now being seen
again in Japan, Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, Korea and many new
Squash nations, worldwide.
PAKISTAN – BIRTHPLACE OF CHAMPIONS
Of all the nations where Squash is played Pakistan is the
greatest enigma, producing a succession of amazing Squash
champions from a country where there are still less than 400
courts. No history of Squash can be complete without an account
of the amazing exploits of the Khan dynasty, starting with
Hashim who won the first of his seven British Open titles in
1951 at the age of 35 years. Hashim was the first of a line of
great Pakistani Squash Champions - Azam Khan, Mohibullah Khan,
Roshan Khan, Aftab Jawaid, Gogi Alauddin, Mo Yasin, Qamar Zaman,
Mohibullah Khan Junior, Hiddy Jahan and the two greatest players
of the 1980s and 1990s, perhaps of all time, Jahangir Khan and
Jansher Khan. Jahangir, now a Vice-President of the World Squash
Federation, dominated the sport for 14 years, winning the
British Open 10 times and the World Open 8 times and was
undefeated for 5½ years. Jansher took over his mantle in 1989
with his first of World Open titles and began a debate in the
sport about which JK was the greatest of them all.
THE
WORLD SCENE
In its early days international Squash was controlled by the
Squash Rackets Association of England and the United States
Squash Rackets Association, but in 1966 representatives of the
sport from Australia, Great Britain, India, New Zealand,
Pakistan, South Africa, USA, Canada and the United Arab Republic
met in London and agreed to form the International Squash
Rackets Association (ISRF), the first meeting of which was held
on 5 January 1967.
The ISRF continued to thrive and was amalgamated with the
Women's International Squash Federation in 1985. In 1992 the
name of the Federation was changed to the World Squash
Federation (WSF), finally recognising that the sport had been
universally referred to simply as "Squash", rather than "Squash
Rackets", for most of its existence.
Squash is played in 130 countries, on 47000 courts, and the
World Squash Federation now has 116 Squash playing National
Associations in membership. It is the sole International
Federation for the sport, as recognised by the International
Olympic Committee (IOC), and maintains responsibility for the
rules of the Game, Court and Equipment Specifications,
Refereeing and Coaching. The WSF maintains a World Calendar of
events and organises and promotes World Championships for Men,
Women, Junior Men, Junior women and Master age groups in both
singles and doubles Squash. The Federation leads its Member
Nations in programmes for the development of the sport and is
currently working with the IOC towards the target of having
Squash included as a sport on the programme of the Olympic Games
in the year 2008.
Squash has been played for over 130 years, grown sensationally
in the last thirty and is now poised to become one of the
largest and best loved of all sports.
Also available as a pdf
document
|