WORLD SQUASH NEWS
WISPA Stars Vie With Putin For Russian Headlines
"My heart is crying that more people were not able to come and see world
squash stars Sarah and Vanessa in action at our club on the final day of
their visit," exclaimed Irina Podubnaya, owner of the Hypersquash Centre
in St Petersburg, despite a packed gallery at the five-court club.
Australia's five-times world champion Sarah Fitz-Gerald and world No5 Vanessa
Atkinson, from the Netherlands, were visiting Russia's second largest city
as part of a nine-day promotional visit to the country, organised by the
Women's International Squash Players' Association.
The WISPA visit, arranged in conjunction with the Russian Squash Federation,
is the latest initiative in the Association's continuing drive to promote
women's squash around the world.
Irina's despair was caused both by the decision two weeks earlier to call
a four-day national holiday during the visit, as well as a last-minute
decision by Russian President Vladimir Putin to pay a state visit to the
city - causing whole sections of St Petersburg to be blocked off for security
reasons! Putin's party were staying at the same hotel as the WISPA group,
but the President was unable to fit in a meeting with the WISPA stars!
"To have Sarah and Vanessa at our club was the most fantastic honour - we
have never seen such high quality squash on our courts and we are so grateful
to them for taking time out to visit our club," added Irina at the end-of-visit
celebrations.
The WISPA stars' exhibition match and those against local players were videod
for screening in the club's reception as a permanent reminder of Fitz-Gerald
and Atkinson's visit.
"The visit will undoubtedly inspire all those who met Sarah and Vanessa - as
well as influence others to take up the sport," said the dynamic Podubnaya,
who is just days away from giving birth to her second child!
"But it will also give a huge boost to the sponsorship potential of our
forthcoming fifth St Petersburg Open, which we plan to stage here in
September/October. It will be one of the biggest ever events held here,
attracting players from all over the Baltic region including Estonia, Latvia,
Lithuania, Finland, Ukraine, Yugoslavia, Poland and Bulgaria," Irina added.
The WISPA visit attracted unprecedented media attention for the sport in the
region. "Women's Squash Champions Beat Our Best Players" screamed the headline
of a prominent news story in the "Comsomolskaya Pravda", a hugely-popular
national paper which sells an incredible 35 million copies a day and is a sister
publication to the established Pravda newspaper.
The report acknowledged that "it was great luck for us to have this visit" and
quoted Alexei Severinov: "I played three matches and lost them all." The writer
concluded that the essential ingredient for future success for Russia in squash
would be for the country "to have more experienced coaches".
The region's leading TV network also covered the visit, pointing out the appeal
of squash to people of St Petersburg, where the city almost grinds to a halt in
the winter when temperatures can reach as low as 40 degrees!
While in St Petersburg, Fitz-Gerald and Atkinson were also able to visit one of
the city's oldest clubs, the Kosmonavtov Club. The two-court centre was founded
in 1997 by enthusiast Pavel Sebirtsev, who discovered the sport when working in
Finland. He also helped build a single-court club in the city's main street
Nevsky Prospekt which opened two months earlier in August 1997.
The two clubs built up a nucleus of the city's earliest players and Sebirtsev is
now President of the St Petersburg Squash Federation.
"Just seeing the personal enthusiasm which has enabled Pavel to actually build
his two courts, allied with the commercial approach of Irina at her centre, makes
the whole visit worthwhile," said WISPA Director Andrew Shelley. "These are people
desperately striving to develop squash in Russia and, although we can only support
in a terribly small way, it is the least that the pro end of the game can do for
the future of our sport.
"If only we could help the Pavels and Irinas in so many other countries too."
The WISPA party now move to Moscow on the second leg of the visit.
Sarah (left) and Vanessa flanked by enthusiasts at the Hypersquash Centre, including
Ukraine's St Petersburg Open champion Roman Dolinich (far left) and Russian champion
Alexei Severinov (far right)
Hypersquash Centre owner Irina Podubnaya receives a WISPA memento from Patron
Sarah Fitz-Gerald (left) and Vanessa Atkinson (right)
Vanessa (left) and Sarah pictured by the famous Bronze Horseman statue, a monument
to Peter The Great, founder of St Petersburg in 1703.
Pictured overlooking the two courts at the Kosmonavtov Club in St Petersburg
are (L to R): nationally-ranked player Katya Alexeeva, Sarah, Vanessa, and club
owner and St Petersburg Squash Federation President Pavel Sebirtsev