05-Nov,
Semi-Finals:
Gregory earns
chance number three
Richard
Eaton
Gregory
Gaultier, the former world number
one from France, earned another chance
of achieving his life’s ambition when he
reached the World Open final for the
third time.
The 28-year-old from Aix-en-Provence
beat James Willstrop, last year’s
World Open runner-up from England, by
11-6, 11-8, 11-4 with a semi-final
performance which suggested he may be
playing well enough to atone for losses
in two previous finals.
Gaultier was relaxed and confident, his
movement was superb, and he avoided the
clusters of errors which occasionally
disfigure his exceptional talent.
Only when Willstrop led 6-2 early on did
it seem that the Englishman’s long reach
and excellent racket skills would cause
trouble. There was also a brief spell in
the middle of the second when Willstrop
fought hard to get back on terms, but
thereafter it was steady progress for
Gaultier.
“It was a bit of a fight in the first
game and then we both relaxed, because I
don’t think we want to be aggressive on
court – it’s just a better game,”
Gaultier said.
“He’s not like that and I don’t think
I’m like that,” he added rather
mysteriously, perhaps a reference to
suggestions that a bit of sledging had
passed between the two of them.
Asked
about his chances of atoning for the
five match points which got away against
David Palmer in the 2006 final in Giza,
and the straight games loss to Amr
Shabana in the following year’s final,
Gaultier offered reasons for being
hopeful.
“I am quite mature now, even if I am
28,” he claimed. “Is this how old you
were when you were world champion?” he
asked his interviewer Vanessa
Atkinson, the women’s World Open
winner in 2004.
“At 26, 27, 28, everything comes
together," Gaultier went on. "With me,
mentally was how it happened. I worked
with people, and I have managed to stay
more calm on court.
“But of course I talk a lot on court,
and this is my character – you are not
going to change someone like this.”
The first sign that Gaultier was getting
on top came with a sequence in which he
played a forehand volley kill, a
forehand cut-off volley winner, and then
a forehand cross court length winner, to
advance to a 7-5 lead.
Despite
a brief altercation with the referee at
the end of that first game, he was soon
motoring to leads of 3-0 and 7-3 in the
second game, sometimes making Willstrop
twist and turn uncomfortably.
Once Willstrop lost his racket and fell
heavily and on another occasion both men
fell and ended sitting on the court,
looking at each other, eventually
grinning.
After that Willstrop’s challenge began
to fade, and when Gaultier clinched the
second game with a drop shot to a
treacherously clinging line, his
progress to victory accelerated the
third.
Gaultier now plays Nick Matthew,
the first Englishman ever to win the
World Open title. Matthew moved to
within one win of retaining it when he
overcame Karim Darwish, a member
of Egypt's world title winning team, by
11-9, 11-9, 11-1.
"I had a little bit of luck to win the
first two games narrowly like that,"
said the Yorkshireman who combined a
supremely disciplined performance with
the courage to go for openings when he
had carved them out. "I feel like I have
done half the job, but now feel I will
go into the final in decent shape."
Gaultier said of his showdown with
Matthew: “I wish him luck - but I wish
myself more luck,” and then claimed: "I
made two finals before, but I have been
taking it one match at a time this week
and didn’t think about the title at
all.”
Then Gaultier paused, thought, and
changed his mind: ”Sometimes I see
myself like that,” he admitted,
gesturing as if to hold up the trophy.
Earlier Nicol David produced a
superbly-controlled win over her longest
lasting rival to move within one win of
a record sixth women’s title.
The phenomenal Malaysian did that with
an 11-9, 11-4, 11-6 win over Natalie
Grinham, the Australian turned Dutch
international whom she beat in the
excellent 2009 World Open final mot far
away in Amsterdam.
David pulled back calmly from a deficit
of 7-9 in the first game, using her
athleticism and well-ordered driving to
keep the rallies as long and arduous as
possible.
“It just feels like déjà vue all over
again whenever we step on court,” said
David, a fellow resident of Amsterdam.
“It was a really close first game, which
I didn’t want, so I am just pleased to
have won 3-0.”
She now plays Jenny Duncalf, the
second seeded English woman, who won
11-9, 11-3, 11-7 against Samantha
Teran, the first Mexican ever to
reach a World Open semi-final.
Also from Richard Eaton:
[ Matthew Aware ] [ Nicol Wants More ] [ Gaultier a contender again? ] [ Thierry Goes On ] [ Unusual start for Nicol ] [ Thanks for the Memories ] [ The Great Illusionist Escapes ] [ Ashour Retires ] [ Gregory's Third ] [ Matthew makes it Two ]
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[ Matthew Aware ] [ Nicol Wants More ] [ Gaultier a contender again? ] [ Thierry Goes On ] [ Unusual start for Nicol ] [ Thanks for the Memories ] [ The Great Illusionist Escapes ] [ Ashour Retires ] [ Gregory's Third ] [ Matthew makes it Two ]




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