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All about squash - news, results and more from PSA, WSF, and more squash tournaments worldwide
SquashSite
19h ago
This year’s European Team Championships take place in Uster, Switzerland, from 1st to 4th May.
We’ll be onsite covering the event, with key links and daily updates here …
Full Coverage from Uster Draws & Results on TS
Division ONE
Pool matches take place over the first two days, with the top two in each pool moving through to the semi-finals. After the playoffs, the bottom two teams are relegated.
Men's Pool A
Men's Pool B
Women's Pool A
Women's Pool B
[1] England
[2] France
[1] England
[2] Belgium
[4] Wales
[3] Switzerland
[4] France
[3] Wales
[5] Spain
[6] Germany
[5 ..read more
SquashSite
19h ago
India’s Saurav Ghosal has announced his immediate retirement from professional squash at the age of 37.
Kolkata-born Ghosal is a trailblazer in his native country and remains the only Indian man to reach the world’s top 10, achieving that position in April 2019 and spending six months there.
Saurav was British Junior Open Champion in 2004, and made his PSA debut in 2003. He reached 18 finals and claimed 10 PSA titles, winning 281 of his 511 matches on the PSA Tour.
Ghosal’s most recent – and joint biggest – PSA title came at the Malaysian Open in November 2021, where he beat Colombian top seed ..read more
SquashSite
19h ago
A Chat With Japanese Squash Sensation, Satomi Watanabe, by Alex Robertson Control the ‘T’ Sports
FIRST THOUGHTS
Japan’s Satomi Watanabe recently made a huge splash on the PSA World Tour by winning the 2024 Optasia Championships at The Wimbledon Club in London.
What made this win even more incredible was that Watanabe overcame World No.4, Nele Gilis, in the final without dropping a single game. Considering Watanabe had never beaten Gilis before, despite facing her four times prior, this was an absolutely astonishing achievement.
I have seen several of Satomi’s matches on SquashTV in the past ..read more
SquashSite
19h ago
SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST
One could easily imagine one is talking to a thinker, or even a philosopher when speaking to the city’s top-ranked men’s squash player, Alex Lau Tsz-kwan.
The 28-year-old Hongkonger, who has spent his past 22 years – and counting – playing the sport that made him a world top-50 player, admitted most of his gains playing the now-Olympic sport are on the “mental” side.
“The first is learning how to live with failure, and then it is persistence and the way I think,” the two-time Hong Kong champion said. “It is because squash, personally, is a strategic game, a battle of w ..read more