Luxembourg finishes in 18th place of 28 teamsOn Saturday , the CITCO-sponsored Luxembourg men’s squash team played their final match of the European Team Squash Championships in Amsterdam against the Czech Republic. At stake was 17th place after Luxembourg’s impressive start to the tournament. The Czechs proved too strong for the Luxembourg squad, the first two matches on court resulting in defeat 3/0 for Nathan Sneyd at no1 and Vince Pauli at no.4. When Daniel Kaiser at no.3 lost the first set, the match was over, but young Danny Hutchines, playing at no.2 in a "dead rubber" put in a good disciplined performance to take the game 2/1 after being a set down. That completed a good week for Danny, who won all of his four matches during the week. Luxembourg therefore finished in 18th place out of 28 teams, a wonderful performance having not played at this level for 11 years.
picture taken from www.squashsite.co.ukResults:Nathan SNEYD lost to Pavel SLADECEK 4/9 ; 2/9 ; 0/9Danny HUTCHINES beat Lukas JEUNEK 5/9 ; 9/6 ; 9/1Daniel KAISER lost to Jaroslav CECH 0/9 ; 3/9Vincent PAULI lost to Ondrej ERTL 2/9 ; 3/9 ; 0/9 Further information:
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picture taken from www.squashsite.co.ukResults:Nathan SNEYD lost to Pavel SLADECEK 4/9 ; 2/9 ; 0/9Danny HUTCHINES beat Lukas JEUNEK 5/9 ; 9/6 ; 9/1Daniel KAISER lost to Jaroslav CECH 0/9 ; 3/9Vincent PAULI lost to Ondrej ERTL 2/9 ; 3/9 ; 0/9 Further information:
picture taken from
Further information:
Due to not competing for such a long time and having no players competing on the Professional Squash Association Tour (PSA), Luxembourg has not been seeded. The official draw has placed the team in a pool with (seedings in brackets) Ukraine (20) and Latvia (23) in the first phase of the tournament. The teams in this pool are in the First Division (as opposed to the Premier Division which includes the highest ranked teams ). Should we finish 1st, we will be playing off for positions 13 -20 as well as promotion to the Premier Division. This would put Luxembourg in a play-off section with three more knock-out matches to play. Should we finish in 2nd or 3rd place in the pool, we will be playing off for positions 21-28. Ukraine and Latvia represent unknown quantities for the Luxembourg team, and are sure to provide stiff opposition. Success would then mean matches against the likes of Italy (13), Austria (14), Hungary (15) or Belgium (16) and in all of these countries, squash is well-developed, with a big pool of players to choose from, so an even bigger challenge would be guaranteed. Further information: