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Texas Open (squash)

Texas Open
Logo Texas Open 2014.jpg
Details
Event name Texas Open
Location United States Houston, United States
Website
www.dallassquash.org/TexasOpen
WSA World Tour
Category International 35
Prize money $35,000
Most recent champion(s) Hong Kong Annie Au

The Texas Open is an annual women's pro squash tournament that takes place alternately in Dallas and Houston, United States in the first half of the year. It is an official PSA World Tour event.

The Texas Open with women’s pro Tour event as we know it today has an unusual heritage. The “parents” are an odd but surprisingly compatible couple: Houston Squash and Dallas Squash.

The squash association in has a distinguished amateur tournament history, including several Texas Opens during the 1990s. In 1996 the organizers added a men’s Open draw with prize money. It was not a men’s professional tour event, but as the prize grew, the number and quality of pro players accepting an invitation to participate increased. The 1998 version, hosted by the Met Club and the Houston YMCA, was particularly successful. As Rishad Alikhan reported “From the Courts” following the Oct. 23-25 event in : “This year’s event offered $8500 in prize money in the Open draw and saw the largest number of participants in the tournament’s history with 112 players participating in 127 slots in 10 draws.” The Open final was a 3-1 upset victory for English pro Nick Taylor (at the time ranked 35 in the world) over 1997 World Champion, Australian Rodney Eyles, (ranked 4 at the time). Several players participated and a few even featured in the amateur draw honors: Jamie Bush 3.5 winner, Mike Frederick 3.5 Consolation winner, Ken Stillman 50+ Consolation winner, Susan Morrison Women’s C/D winner. For a number of reasons, 4 years passed before the next staging of a comparable Texas Open in, and by then an interesting change had occurred.

In May 2000, Dallas hosted a $17,000 WISPA Tour event. The initial spark came from when one of their players saw a women’s tour event in and began inquiries on how to bring WISPA to town. But that spark actually first caught fire in Dallas rather than Houston for two reasons. In 1999 WISPA President Sarah Fitz-Gerald came to for an exhibition with local teaching pro Aidan Harrison. Everyone in the large audience was impressed by her style and athleticism as she beat him. In addition, already had a top woman teaching pro in Thelma Van Eck. Having suffered on court with her, local players understood only too well how tough Thelma could be and were now curious how she might fare against the world’s best. The stage was set for the WISPA Dallas Open! On the international court at the Downtown Dallas YMCA, one of only 5 proper 21’ courts in the whole Metroplex at the time, World #1 Cassie Jackman (playing under her married name, Campion) beat World #2 Leilani Joyce for the crown in four games. Local heroine Van Eck had failed to halt Joyce’s march in the first round but had played valiantly. She had qualified for the main draw with a victory over rising star Natalie Grinham, ranked 30th in the world at the time. Lots of players travelled to for the festivities. Their most recent installment of the Texas Open had been 2 years earlier and it would be 2 more years until the next one, but a new seed was sown.


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