Motor City Open 2012

The Motor City Open 2012 is the 2012's Motor City Open (squash), which is a tournament of the PSA World Tour event International (Prize money: $50,000). The event took place at the Birmingham Athletic Club in Detroit in the United States from 27 to 30 January. Ong Beng Hee won his first Motor City Open trophy, beating Hisham Mohd Ashour in the final.

Motor City Open 2012
13th Motor City Open
Details
Event nameMotor City Open 2012
Location Detroit United States
VenueBirmingham Athletic Club
Website
themotorcityopen.com
Men's PSA World Tour
CategoryWorld Tour International 50
Prize money$50,000
YearWorld Tour 2012

Prize money and ranking points

For 2012, the prize purse was $50,000. The prize money and points breakdown is as follows:[1]

Prize Money Motor City Open (2012)
Event W F SF QF 1R
Points (PSA) 875 575 350 215 125
Prize money $8,550 $5,850 $3,825 $2,360 $1,350

Seeds

  1. Mohamed El Shorbagy (Semifinals)
  2. Hisham Mohd Ashour (Final)
  3. Alister Walker (Quarterfinals)
  4. Cameron Pilley (Quarterfinals)

Draw and results

First round Quarter finals Semi finals Final
1 Mohd El Shorbagy 11 11 11
Q Mathieu Castagnet 4 9 9 Mohd El Shorbagy 11 11 11
Miguel Á. Rodriguez 11 11 11 Miguel Á. Rodriguez 5 9 8
Alan Clyne 8 6 5 1 Mohd El Shorbagy 9 7 11
Ong Beng Hee 10 11 11 7 11 Ong Beng Hee 11 11 13
Q Grégoire Marche 12 3 8 11 8 Ong Beng Hee 8 13 11 8 11
Shahier Razik 6 3 9 4 Cameron Pilley 11 11 8 11 5
4 Cameron Pilley 11 11 11 Ong Beng Hee 11 11 11
3 Alister Walker 8 11 11 8 11 2 Hisham Ashour 8 9 7
Aamir Atlas Khan 11 8 7 11 8 3 Alister Walker 11 3 9 7
Stephen Coppinger 11 11 13 11 Stephen Coppinger 9 11 11 11
Q Mohammed Abbas 5 13 11 5 Stephen Coppinger 11 6 9 9
Mohd Nafi. Adnan 7 10 5 2 Hisham Ashour 8 11 11 11
Q Max Lee 11 12 11 Q Max Lee 9 8 5
Adrian Grant 6 4 11 5 2 Hisham Ashour 11 11 11
2 Hisham Ashour 11 11 4 11

[2]

gollark: But it's not toward actual stated goals.
gollark: You can only really say something is "rational" as a way to achieve some goals, not just objectively "rational" on its own. So arguably humans are somewhat rationally maximizing short-term happiness. *But*, isn't happiness at least partly just a heuristic for decision-making *too*?
gollark: This can probably just be read as "strong time preference" again, I guess, *partly*.
gollark: https://xkcd.com/2278/
gollark: It is... also awful.

See also

References

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