Egypt’s 21-year-old Mohamed El Shorbagy – the youngest player in the world top 25 – upset 4th-seeded compatriot Karim Darwish in the quarter-finals of the Qatar PSA World Squash Championship in Doha to reach the semi-finals for the 1st time.
Boasting a $325,000 prize-fund, the 2nd biggest in the sport’s history, the Qatar PSA World Championship is being hosted by Qatar for the third time – following previous stagings in 1998 and 2004 – and being held at the Khalifa International Tennis & Squash Complex.
“The head-to-head between these two Egyptians was 7-1 in Darwish’s favour coming into this match,” observed tournament MC Robert Edwards. “But Mohamed came of age this afternoon as he wore down and finally beat his good friend.”
After his sensational 11-9, 12-10, 11-9 upset over the former world number one, El Shorbagy “fell to the floor and lay there prone as the cheers washed over him,” added Edwards.
Interviewed by Edwards after the match, the world No6 from Alexandria said how much respect he had for 31-year-old Darwish, who had encouraged him as a youngster coming into the game by spending time on court with him.
Later, El Shorbagy told his Twitter followers: “I’m out of words right now, I’m in the semis of the Worlds!!!”
The 8th-seeded underdog now faces top seed James Willstrop for a place in the final. The world number 1 from England, bidding to win the crown for the 1st time, ended Spaniard Borja Golan’s run – beating the surprise quarter-finalist from Santiago de Compostela 11-7, 11-7, 11-5 in 65 minutes.
“We clashed out there,” admitted the 29-year-old from Leeds later. “It wasn’t pretty and not the best match to be involved in. But you need to win these ropey matches. People think I am a rhythmical player – but I showed I can win scrappy too!”
Golan, who had become the first Spaniard for 20 years to reach the world quarter-finals, added: “I was playing the world number one. I tried one hundred per cent on each point, but today he was better than me.
The other semi-final will also be an Anglo/Egyptian clash – between England’s defending champion Nick Matthew and 2008 champion Ramy Ashour.
Fifth seed Ashour overcame French rival Gregory Gaultier, the No3 seed, 12-10, 10-12, 11-6, 9-11, 11-3 in an exhilarating 92-minute encounter in which the Egyptian saved five game-balls in the 1st game and Gaultier saved five in the 2nd!
In the final match of the day Matthew, the world number 2 from England bidding to become the 1st player since Pakistan legend Jansher Khan to win the world title three times in a row, faced illustrious Egyptian Amr Shabana, a four-time winner of the trophy.
It took more than an hour for Matthew winning 11-5, 9-11, 11-5, 11-4 in 64 minutes to reach his fourth semi-final since 2007.
Semi-final line-up:
[1] James Willstrop (ENG) v [8] Mohamed El Shorbagy (EGY)
[2] Nick Matthew (ENG) v [5] Ramy Ashour (EGY)