![]() Fitzgerald Cup |
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Five in a Row! (2006)
(Jan. 2004) The Washington sides won again in the annual Lacy and FitzGerald Cup competitions. The women won the Lacy with a clean sweep over Baltimore, 10-0, in matches played at the Sports Club/LA, while the men pulled out an 8-5 win at the University Club, in the 56th renewal of the FitzGerald Cup. The standard of the matches was generally top notch, but two matches in particular stood out as showcases for the tournament and squash in general. The first saw Baltimore’s Jahangir Naseem stop a rapidly improving junior from Washington in five games. Naseem appears to have come on in leaps and bounds since moving to Meadow Mill from Potomac, which resulted in a much tougher proposition for his opponent than previous form would have suggested. The second memorable match will go down as a classic squash ‘arm wrestle’. The veteran Chip Lindquist, was matched up against college student Jake Himmelrich. Himmelrich displays near perfect technique and has a mental attitude to match. He seems destined to develop the physical strength in general play and a reliable kill shot which he requires to become a national standard player. Despite this, Lindquist would not be denied and hung in for nearly 90 minutes against his focused opponent. From about the third game on the match was mesmerising, as the ascendancy swung back and forth. Late in the fifth it was apparent that the fuel tank was empty for Lindquist as his legs began to give and he attempted to keep the ball high and long to slow the play. Himmelrich sought to capitalise with an array of touch boasts which initially appeared as clean winners, but Lindquist dug deep to retrieve nearly every one of them with an unbelievable series of last ditch lunges. Somehow, Lindquist had managed to struggle to have match ball 7 in the fifth. However, the oxygen debt was clearly playing with Lindquist’s mind as well his body, because in the next rally he overruled the referee on a let call that appeared fair, offering the stroke to Himmelrich. This provided the momentum switch that Himmelrich needed and he eventually prevailed 10-8, so ending a thoroughly memorable match. It was fitting the result was determined in the end by Lindquist’s sportsmanship; a poignant reminder of Ambassador FitzGerald’s legacy. Among the juniors, the top matches in the under-17 age groups offered the most drama, with both matches going to Baltimore. For the Girls Under 17, Washington's #1, Sarah Nawaz fell behind to Baltimore's Hayley Millbourne 2-0 in games, fought valiantly to win the third game, and then lost a very tight fourth game. At #1 for the Boys Under 17, Peter Sopher opened strong for Washington, winning a very close first game over Baltimore's Colin Campbell, but Campbell came back, picking up two very tight games and pulling away, 9-5, in the fourth. That match lasted an hour and ten minutes, and was marked by many very long points (Peter and Colin are both extraordinary runners) and frequent service exchanges. It should be noted that this was the fourth FitzGerald Cup Junior Division Match for Alex Gross, Peter and Philip Sopher, Andrea Wood, and Baltimore's John Bradley. It was the third appearance for Jake Gross, Christine Montgomery, Patrick Harris, Mike Maruca, Joseph Powden, and Baltimore's Peter Hawkins and Colin Campbell. All have been mainstays of the Mid-Atlantic Junior Programs. They have traveled together to many tournaments and most went abroad together for training. This summer some will graduate from high school and move out of town to college. They will be missed. FitzGerald Cup Match Results: Lacy Cup Match Results: Junior Match Results: Washington Gets a Clean Sweep in Baltimore (Jan. 2003) The men and women of Washington, and their junior counterparts, all won stunning victories at Baltimore's Meadow Mill Club on Jan. 4th. The men, competing in the 55th renewal of the FitzGerald Cup challenge, beat Baltimore 8-5, while the women took the inaugural Lacy Cup, 8-2. Both challenges were played out on the five courts of Meadow Mill's main hallway, with the men using three courts on one side of the room, and the women using the two courts on the other side. Meanwhile, the juniors were playing at the Baltimore Country Club, with Washington winning, 11-5. The FitzGerald Cup competition was much closer than the 8-5 score would suggest. The Washington team often does well at the bottom of the ladder only to lose the Cup when the top of the ladder is played. This year the Washingtonians took a 6-3 lead, needing to win only one of the top four matches to secure the Cup, but then promptly lost two quick matches to a pair of rapidly improving Baltimore juniors. Francis Johnson swept the #4 match over Terry Hindermann. Then Jacob Himmelrich, who last year was summarily dismissed in three games by Chip Lindquist at #5, moved up to #3 this year and beat Rod Barnes, 3-1. At #2, Ted Mathias fell behind Baltimore's Peter Blank, two games to one, making it look like Washington's last hope might be Neal Tew at #1. However, Mathias stormed back to capture the Cup with a 5-game win over Blank, and Tew finished with a 3-0 win over Dave Bennett. Similarly, the Lacy Cup could easily have gone to Baltimore if they had managed to pull out the three matches that went to five games. Instead, all three went to the Washington players, Tracy Barnes beating Anna Minkowski after dropping the first two games at #2, Liz Arens beating Kathy Connor at #4 and A.J.Jaffin getting the win over Laurie Miller at #10. FitzGerald Cup Match Results: Lacy Cup Match Results: Junior Match Results: Washington Wins 54th FitzGerald Cup (Jan. 2002) Washington's FitzGerald Cup team reclaimed the 54-year-old silver cup on Jan. 5th, winning four of five matches at the University Club and splitting the eight matches played at Results the Gym. The 8-5 win was an exact reversal of last year's 5-8 loss at Baltimore's Meadow Mill Club. Overall, Washington holds a 35-19 edge in the history of the cup. In the junior flight, Baltimore prevailed 7-5. Following the squash, the two teams gathered at the home of Amb. William H.G. FitzGerald, to celebrate. Except where indicated, all matches were played at Results the Gym on Capital Hill. Adult Match Results: Junior Match Results: Baltimore Wins 53rd FitzGerald Cup (Dec. 2000) After a year in Washington, the FitzGerald cup is going back to Baltimore. Technically, the 53-year-old silver cup will still reside in Washington, where it is safely protected in a locked case at the University Club, but title now belongs to Baltimore, following Saturday's 8-5 victory over the visitors from Washington. All the matches were played on the international courts at Meadow Mill Athletic Club. The Washington team started strong, winning five of the first six matches, but the hosts came back strong, sweeping the top of the card. Washington had their best chances for upsets at #3 and #6, where the University Club's Terry Hindermann and Jonathan Lam of Chevy Chase each took 2-1 leads before losing in five games. Despite the setback, the Washington team still holds an overall 34-19 edge in the history of the challenge cup, which was inaugurated in 1948 in honor of Ambassador William FitzGerald, one of the fathers of Washington squash. This year's event also saw the first juniors competition, with six matches played at the Baltimore Country Club. The Washington team took a 5-1 win, the only loss coming in the last match, when 13-year-old Andrea Wood played up an age category, unsuccessfully challenging Baltimore's very talented Katie Peck, aged 16.
Adult Match Results:
Junior Match Results:
Bill FitzGerald and the Early Days of D.C. Squash (June 2000) Fresh from the Naval Academy and Harvard Law School, Bill FitzGerald began playing squash in 1934 in New York City. Moving to Washington late in the decade, there was only one place to play - the Racquet Club on 16th Street, long since known as the University Club. Today, at 91, Bill FitzGerald is its oldest member. On a recent morning, Ambassador FitzGerald is hard at work in his downtown office, appropriately only a short walk from the University Club. Immaculately attired, as always, in his trademark blue blazer, Mr. FitzGerald leans back and smiles when he reflects on the early days of squash in the nation's capitol. “I used to play at 6:30 a.m. with Vice-President Henry Wallace, who lived at the Wardman Park Hotel,” he remembers. “I'd pull up in front and flash my lights - there was no-security - and he'd come down.” Squash got more courts when the Pentagon was completed in 1940. Bill says the game began to take off in 1942 with the war-induced influx of Easterners into Washington. By then out of the navy and established in business, in 1948 Bill FitzGerald founded the FitzGerald cup, a competition between the University Club and the Maryland Club in Baltimore. Continuously played for 52 years, the FitzGerald Cup is acclaimed as one of the most important competitions in American squash. Long prominent in public service, law, and Catholic charities, Bill FitzGerald served as U.S. Ambassador to Ireland in 1992-1993. Still remarkably fit, Bill remains an active tennis player, playing doubles five times a week with a group of friends that have been together for 40 years. While he gave up squash 30 years ago (never moving to the international game), Ambassador FitzGerald is equally committed to tennis and squash.
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