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Wael El Hindi

Wael El Hindi
Wael-El-Hindi.jpg
Full name Wael Hatem El Hindi
Country  Egypt
Residence New York City, United States
Born (1980-06-25) June 25, 1980 (age 36)
Giza, Egypt
Height 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)
Weight 77 kg (170 lb)
Turned Pro 1999
Retired 2013
Plays Right Handed
Coached by Jonah Barrington
Racquet used Tecnifibre
Highest ranking No. 8 (November 2008)
Title(s) 8
Tour final(s) 13
World Open QF (2006, 2009)
Last updated on: June 2013.

Wael Hatem El-Hendy, (Arabic: وائل الهندى‎‎) (born June 25, 1980 in Giza) is a professional squash player who represented Egypt. A Professional Squash Association (PSA) member since 1999, Wael El Hindi has long been regarded as one of Egypt's most talented players – first making his mark in the USA in 1998 when he reached the final of the World Junior Championship as a 5/8 seed. Steady progress on the Tour saw the 28-year-old from Giza – who currently divides his time between Egypt and England – reached a career high ranking of World No. 8 in November 2008.

El Hindi reached his first Tour final in Spain at the Trofeo Aquarius Open in October 1999 – but it was a further two years later, in the same country, that he claimed his maiden title at the Spanish Open in Tenerife, in September 2001. Early the following year, he won his first trophy on home soil at the El Ahly Open in Cairo.

In 2004, El Hindi began a love-affair with Malaysia where he won the Kuala Lumpur Open in February – then went on to reach the final of the Malaysian Open later in the year, and again in 2005, in both cases exceeding his seeding. His standout achievements in 2006 included home country success in the Heliopolis Open in August 2006 – when he made his breakthrough after beating Finland's second seed Olli Tuominen in the quarter-finals. The following month, unseeded, he joined the last eight of the World Open, also in Egypt, after beating seeded compatriot Karim Darwish and England's Nick Matthew.

El Hindi began 2007 by again beating higher-seeded Darwish en route to a semi-final berth in the Canadian Classic in January. In April, he produced impressive performances in both the Kuwait Open and Qatar Classic (in Doha, featuring upsets over Anthony Ricketts and Lee Beachill) which saw him leap four places to make his top ten debut in May. In July, he successfully defended his Heliopolis Open crown after overcoming fellow Egyptians in each round – Mohd Ali Anwar Reda, Omar Elborolossy and Mohammed Abbas, then Karim Darwish in the final.


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