KUWAIT CITY - Top-seeded Karim Darwish, one
of the 'big three' Egyptians who are helping to give their country
unprecedented dominance of world squash, was knocked out of the World
Open here on Tuesday on a day of surprise and confusion.
Darwish, Amr Shabana and Ramy Ashour helped Egypt
to succeed England as world team champions last month, but now the man
who topped the rankings for the first the months of the year was halted
in four games by an old English adversary, James Willstrop.
Willstrop,
normally such a fluent shot-maker, was very patient in his 11-7, 11-7,
3-11, 11-9 win, and it was apparently a major upset that the eleventh
seed should wrap up so fine a win in such well-ordered way.
But
Willstrop has succeeded against Darwish more often than not, having
been victor in all of their four matches in the last three years, and
knew he had a really good chance.
"I didn't plan to play the way
I did. I just played cagey because that was the way it panned out. It
seemed to be the right way to respond to what was happening," Willstrop
said, referring to the fact that containment seemed a comfortable
response to Darwish's early assertiveness.
Willstrop played tight
and accurately and usually scored either when Darwish made a mistake,
or played short, allowing him an opportunity to get in with a tight
drop or quick kill.
He also focussed well when it mattered,
moving steadily from 5-6 to 11-7 in both the first two games, and
working extremely hard to rescue the fourth game from a 4-7 deficit.
The
third game was all Darwish, who was ruthless with anything loose,
scoring well with sharp low kills and three times with winners from
very deep positions. He carried this momentum into the fourth, not only
achieving a decent lead but also moving Willstrop around a lot.
"I knew this was a bit of a crisis," the Englishman said.
"I did all I could to hang in there."
It
was a hard and tiring road back to parity, but once Willstrop got there
he was rewarded with one or two more errors from Darwish, as the
pressure grew on the top seed.
And Willstrop played two great
last rallies, returning to something nearer his more characteristic
attacking style to close the contest out.
"He (Darwish) was very dominating and so I had to react to his authority," he said.
"I was pleased with the way I came back. I did it well."
Darwish
might have claimed that all the confusion which surrounded the build-up
to the match might have affected his mentality, but he refused to make
that an excuse.
First, a little rain and the forecast of more
caused the tournament to be re-scheduled from the all-glass show court
by the sea to a conventional indoor court at a local club - only for
television chiefs to object, and the match to be returned to its
outdoor venue.
"I am not sure all sportsmen would have handled it as well as we were," said Willstrop.
"I thought we were both handling it really well."
He now plays Thierry Lincou, the former world champion from France.
Darwish's
defeat was followed by Shabana, three times the former world champion,
and Ashour, the defending champion, both progressing without alarms,
beating Daryl Selby of England and Laurens-Jan Anjema respectively.
It increased the chances of Egypt again providing the champion, and certainly confidence has never been higher.
Egypt
currently holds the 2009 men's world team title, the 2009 women's world
junior team title, the 2009 men's world junior title, the 2009 women's
world junior title, the 2008 women's world team title, and the 2008
men's World Open title.
Shabana now plays his compatriot Wael El
Hindi, Ashour meets Peter Barker of England, and the other
quarter-final is between Gregory Gaultier, the second-seeded world
number one from France, and Nick Matthew, the British Open champion
from England.