Qatar Classic 2021. Ramit Tandon advances to Round-2

Squash Emcee Andy Taylor. 2021 Qatar Classic. Match 1. Round 1. Ramit Tandon def Greg Lobban. Match Recap

Round-1 match recap from Squash Emcee Andy Taylor, Voice of the Qatar Classic.

Since 2017, Andy Taylor has been the voice of the Qatar Classic Squash Championship. With his individual style and delivery, Andy writes and narrates each player’s introduction; highlighting career accomplishments, providing context for fans before each match. As tournament emcee, Andy also interviews the winners and hosts the trophy ceremony at the conclusion of the championship.

In addition to his role with the Qatar Squash Federation, Taylor also hosts Doha’s professional tennis events, the Qatar ExxonMobil Open and Qatar Total Open.

A voice acting veteran, Andy is best known as the Voice of the US Open in New York. There, he has spent the last 20-years shaping the sound of the tennis season’s final Grand Slam; enhancing the fan experience. Informing. Entertaining. Celebrating sport and its colorful cast of characters.

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Second meeting. Tandon gets it done in five. First Platinum win in Qatar.
Squash Emcee Andy Taylor. 2021 Qatar Classic. Match 1. Round 1. Ramit Tandon def Greg Lobban. Head to Head
Ramit Tandon -46- (IND) | Round-1 Emcee Introduction

Last month, in front of the pyramids at Giza, this 29-year-old reached the Final-16 of a Platinum event for the first time at the Egyptian Open. Then, earlier this month in Philadelphia, he scored another career-first – defeating Lucas Serme again to earn his first main-draw victory at the US Open. Four years ago, ranked outside the top-200, he made his Doha debut at the Qatar Circuit $15k event — and after a run to the Quarterfinals, cracked the PSA’s top-100 for the first time. Today, he returns with a career-high ranking of World #46 – in pursuit of his first Platinum victory on this court. From India, please welcome Ramit Tandon.

  • R1 — W — Greg Lobban -32- (SCO) | Score: 11-9, 11-7, 9-11, 12-14, 11-8 (60m)
EMCEE NOTEBOOK
  • Owns 4 PSA Challenger titles and is a 7-time Finalist on Tour
  • Earlier this month in Philadelphia, won a main draw match at the US Open for the first time.
  • In November of 2017, as a Wild Card ranked outside the top-200 in Mumbai, Tandon upset top-seed (World #18) Borja Golan to reach the Semifinals of the PSA World Tour Bronze CCI International. Two weeks later, he reached the Quarterfinals of the PSA Challenger Qatar Circuit No. 4 in Doha. The next month, he cracked the top-100 (World #88) for the first time and captured his second PSA Challenger title (Singapore Open).
Greg Lobban -32- (SCO) | Round-1 Emcee Introduction

At 29-years-old, he owns 11 career titles, is a 22-time Finalist, and is the top Scottish talent on the PSA World Tour. Two seasons back, just before the global pandemic halted all international competition, he defeated World #4 Karim Abdel Gawad at the Canary Wharf Classic – reaching the Quarterfinals of a PSA Gold-level event for the first time. Six months later, when play finally resumed in Manchester, he climbed to a career-high ranking of World #21. Making his 7th Doha appearance, he was a Semifinalist on this court at the Qatar Squash Federation PSA Bronze event in 2018. From Scotland, please welcome the World #32, Greg Lobban.

  • R1 — L — Ramit Tandon -46- (IND) | Score: 9-11, 7-11, 11-9, 14-12, 8-11 (60m)
EMCEE NOTEBOOK
  • 7th Doha appearance. 4th Qatar Q-Terminals Squash Classic
  • Two of his three World Championship match victories have come on this court (2014, 2019)
  • Doha Semifinalist at the 2018 QSF PSA Bronze event
  • Now 3-4 this season, with Round-2 runs at the Egyptian Open, US Open and Cleveland Skating Cup Open Challenger
MORE EMCEE RECAPS FROM THE QATAR CLASSIC SQUASH CHAMPIONSHIP 2021

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Squash Emcee Andy Taylor. Qatar Classic 2020. Champions in Doha 1992 to Today
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QATAR SQUASH: 27 YEARS OF HIGHLIGHTS AND HISTORY

For nearly three decades, the Qatar Squash Federation has hosted the sport’s elite at the Khalifa International Tennis and Squash Complex. Originally coined the Qatar International, Pakistan’s Jansher Khan captured the first five Doha titles from 1992 to 1996. Canada’s Jonathan Power then won back-to-back Doha titles over Scotland’s Peter Nichol; earning triumphs at the 1997 Qatar International and the 1998 World Championship.

Enter the Qatar Classic Squash Championship

After a two year absence, professional squash returned to Doha in 2001. Rebranded the Qatar Classic, Peter Nichol – now representing England – again reached back-to-back Doha Finals. This time, he captured the first two Qatar Classic titles over Australia’s David Palmer. England’s Lee Beachill and James Willstrop won the next two Qatar Classic titles, before Egypt began its outright Doha dominance.

In fact, since Ramy Ashour became the first Egyptian Doha champion at the 2006 Qatar Classic; the Arab nation has won 13 of the last 15 Doha titles, including three World Championships. Alexandria’s Mohamed Elshorbagy – the only 3-time Qatar Classic Champion – reached a record six consecutive finals on this court between 2012 and 2017. Most recently, Ali Farag won back-to-back Qatar Classic titles in 2018 and 2020. Unfortunately, the World #1 won’t be back in Doha this year to defend the title.

Professional Squash and COVID-19

Like every international sport, the recent global pandemic has created tremendous challenges for squash events worldwide. Due to COVID’s insidious spread, the 2019-20 season ended abruptly in March; immediately following Mohamed Elshorbagy’s victory at the 2020 Canary Wharf Classic.

Without fans, the sport launched its return six months later in Manchester – another Elshorbagy triumph. However, with global cases hitting a second surge, all events in the United Kingdom, United States and Asia were shuttered. The 2020-2021 season was in peril. At the time, as a U.S. resident, Andy Taylor made the difficult decision to suspend all international travel. Reluctantly, he stepped away from his role as emcee at the 2020 Qatar Classic.

Saviors. The Qatar Squash Federation and CIB’s CEO Hussein Abaza of Egypt

Over the next 10-months, Qatar and Egypt were the only two nations to host PSA Platinum events. Without the U.S. Open. Hong Kong Open. New York’s Tournament of Champions. The Windy City Open. And British Open — The sport needed bold and determined intervention.

Cautiously, the QSF moved forward with the Qatar Classic, providing a COVID safe bubble for players and crew. Meanwhile, Egypt’s Hussein Abaza went above and beyond. Remarkably, CIB’s CEO spearheaded two PSA World Tour Finals, the Egyptian Open, two Black Ball Opens and El Gouna International. From September to June, he funded six expensive, top-tier PSA events for both the men’s and women’s tours. Egypt became the hub of the sport – a safe place to compete while vaccinations took hold; while the world recovered.

Thankfully, since July, much of the globe has slowly opened back up. Chicago hosted the World Championships. Hull welcomed the sport’s elite for the British Open. Last month, it was only fitting that the 2021-22 season began in front of the pyramids at Giza. True to form, Egyptian rivals Ali Farag and Mohamed Elshorbagy headlined the event; delivering an exceptional 5-game Final, where Farag lifted his 9th Platinum trophy.

A Sport Back on Track, thanks to human compassion and ingenuity

After September’s Egyptian Open, the U.S. swing was also a tremendous success. From San Francisco to the US Open’s immaculate new Arlen Specter US Squash Center in Philadelphia; fans responsibly returned, recently tested or fully vaccinated. All starved to once again see the best in the world compete inside the glass.

Now, squash returns to the Arab Gulf for the 17th Qatar Classic Squash Championship.

Thankfully, as global vaccinations continue their ascent, the new squash season is beginning to follow a familiar path. While the past 19-months have been dark, spotlighting the reality of human fragility; it has also been an epoch defined by compassion, resilience and hope. Squash, as a sport and lifestyle, embodies these traits.

When we choose to quiet the noise, steel our determination, and commit to selflessly work together toward collective good; ultimately toward survival — the darkness is no match for our blinding ingenuity.

No, the fight isn’t over. But we’ve hit some astonishing nicks, and continue to edge closer toward “match ball.”