Don't halt the Olympic dream of this noble sport... it's a travesty squash won't be part of the Games in Tokyo
- Squash struck out a third time in its bid to be included at the Tokyo Olympics
- But a recent trip to the Premier Squash League proved why it is worthy of a place
- Live squash is enthralling and estimable, given what it takes out of the players
- Australian Open organisers damage tennis by parading Maria Sharapova
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This is the Premier Squash League, a 10-club competition regarded as the most prestigious of its kind; and it's very, very good.
I
won't lie. I was there because my friend runs the team currently top of
the PSL South, Tradition at The Royal Automobile Club. But I was also
there because squash keeps trying, and failing, to be recognised as an
Olympic sport and that has never seemed right. The argument runs that it
is a difficult watch, hard to capture on television. I wanted to see
for myself.
The argument is wrong. Live
squash is brilliant. Enthralling, exhilarating and estimable, given
what it takes out of the players. Television cameras are just an
electronic set of eyes. Well, everyone in that room had eyes and what we
saw raised the roof in what is, typically, a rather staid environment.
Squash struck out a third time as an
Olympic sport for Tokyo in 2020. Baseball/softball, karate, sport
climbing, surfing and skateboarding are all now included but squash went
the way of wushu — no, me neither — 10-pin bowling and roller-skating.
It
is a travesty, really. Surely the soul of climbing resides outdoors?
Skateboarders, like snow-boarders, compete for show, more than medals.
That a sport like squash demanding so much of its competitors loses out
to what are basically leisure or lifestyle activities, or to golf,
snubbed by the best players in the world in 2016, is a dreadful
indictment of the IOC's priorities.
An
Olympic gold medal should be the pinnacle for any competing sport. Nicol
David of Malaysia, former women's world No 1 and an eight-time world
champion, said she would swap all her titles for a single Olympic gold.
Would Rory McIlroy swap his four major titles the same way? We all know
the answer to that.
Hundreds of spectators turned up to cheer as Paul Coll and Elshorbagy went into battle
And,
yes, a fixture at the RAC Club smacks of elitism, but four of the five
teams in the Premier League North come out of universities, and other
clubs in Premier League South, such as Bexley and Chichester, reflect
humbler origins.
The RAC was the
perfect venue for a club called Tradition — named after its sponsors,
Compagnie Financiere Tradition — because it is the unofficial home of
squash, the way Lord's is the home of cricket.
The
RAC clubhouse hosted the first meetings to set up competitive squash;
the Squash Rackets Association conducted their business from there after
they were formed in 1928. The courts are old school, white walls and
wooden floors, not the modern glass-surrounded new-builds, so necessary
for spectators and television audiences, but it is plain the players get
a kick out of being there.
Even if
it's hot. So incredibly hot, in fact, that by the time Elshorbagy and
Coll played the last of the five club matches on Tuesday, there were
regular delays while the court was cleaned of sweat.
There
is nowhere to put a towel on a squash court, because everywhere is in
play. It's a gladiatorial pit, really. No escape and no quarter. And if a
player slips, as happens, he leaves an imprint of moisture that has to
be erased: because it's that hard. What would be called a set in tennis
is a game in squash, and Elshorbagy left to change his shirt after every
game. It did not matter. Within minutes the new attire was drenched
through, too.
The RAC Club in Pall Mall, London, is usually a stuff and elitist place, but not on this night
There
were a lot of good players in action through the night, but the speed
of Elshorbagy's forehand was exceptional. Yet Coll is renowned as the
fittest player on the circuit. In the world of squash that is saying
something. It was an outstanding match-up, running to five games,
Elshorbagy triumphing 11-8 at the last.
Nobody
who saw it would buy the idea that squash could not convert to
television. Squash TV, the brainchild of the Professional Squash
Association, has exploded that myth, with higher quality cameras, better
lit courts and friendlier surrounds to improve the visibility of the
ball.
As a result, a television
audience of more than one million watched the men's singles final at the
Commonwealth Games in 2014. And, as far as Olympic action goes, there
is always interest once you've got a horse in the race. Think curling.
In
the end, the IOC has to decide what the Olympics is about: commerce or
competition. There is little doubt the new sports that have been
successfully adopted are there largely for financial reasons. Golf,
surfing, even rugby sevens — there is money to be made.
Yet
squash is approachable enough to be the national sport in Egypt, a
country whose average income per capita ranks it 127th in the world.
What is it about affordability that also finds no appeal with the IOC?
Egypt
have six players in the top nine men and critics claim one nation
dominates. Yet there are 12 nationalities in the top 25 and six sporting
continents are covered: Europe, Africa, South America, Central America,
Asia and Oceania.
Egypt have six players in the top nine men and critics claim the African nation dominates
Compare
that to golf, where nine countries feature in the top 25 men —
including five Americans in the top eight — and nine in the top 25
women, including four Koreans in the top six and 13 of the 25 overall.
That's why squash is getting a raw deal. Just about every negative that
is thrown its way can equally be applied to other Olympic sports.
Elitist?
Then what of modern pentathlon, a sport designed to replicate the
predicament of a 19th-century cavalryman, trapped behind enemy lines? To
rejoin his regiment he must win fights by sword and pistol, ride an
unfamiliar horse, swim and run. No doubt they talk of little else in
Bolton.
As for being difficult for
spectators — dressage, shooting, archery anyone? If the speed of squash
does not lend itself to shot-by-shot commentary, the same could be said
of table tennis, a sport in which all but one Olympic gold medal has
been won by China since 1992, 23 out of 24.
'Nobody
is quite sure why the sport has suffered repeated failures,' wrote
former world No 1 James Willstrop, after squash's latest rejection. 'The
Olympics is the biggest sporting event in the world. Of course we want
to be there but all we ever do is try to justify ourselves. These
athletes, some of the greatest alive, shouldn't need to do this. This is
our sport and it's getting better all the time. Must we beg?'
He's
right. Squash shouldn't have to plead for Olympic recognition. If those
at the helm of the IOC cannot recognise a great sport, simply
presented, we can only make some rather familiar assumptions about their
motives. The RAC isn't the only cosy little club, it seems.
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