PSA World Series

The PSA World Series (formerly known as the PSA Super Series) were a series of men's and women's squash tournaments which are part of the Professional Squash Association (PSA) World Tour for the squash season. The PSA World Series tournaments are some of the most prestigious events on the men's tour. The best-performing players in the World Series events qualify for the annual PSA World Series Finals tournament.

PSA World Series
Details
Event namePSA World Series
Dates1992–2018
Squash

Each year, several tournaments on the tour are designated World Series events. These include major events such as the World Championship, the British Open, the Hong Kong Open or the Tournament of Champions. Then, early the next year, the eight best-performing players from the Super Series events are invited to compete in the PSA World Series Finals (a similar event to the ATP World Tour Finals).

The World Series Squash Finals were first staged in Vitis Club in Zurich, Switzerland, in 1993 and 1994. The event was then moved to England. It was held at the Galleria shopping complex in Hatfield from 1996–98. From 1999–2006, it was held in the Broadgate Arena in London. In 2007, the event was moved to the National Squash Centre in Manchester. In 2009, the tournament was shortened to a four-day format and played at the Queen's Club in London. And in 2014, the event was held for the first time in the United States in the Westwood Club in Richmond, Virginia.

From January 2015, it also includes World Series tournaments for women's after merger between PSA and WSA in November 2014.

After 2017–18 PSA World Series is replaced by new PSA World Tour and PSA World Tour finals.

Tournaments

Here is the list of tournaments that have been at least a season PSA World Series tournament since 1993 :

Tournament Country Location (the last) Notable venue Began Gender
World Championship / / / 1976 M/F
British Open Great Britain Hull Airco Arena 1930 M/F
Tournament of Champions  United States New York City Grand Central Terminal 1930 M/F
US Open  United States Philadelphia Daskalakis Athletic Center 1954 M/F
Hong Kong Open  Hong Kong Hong Kong Tsim Sha Tsui 1985 M/F
Qatar Classic  Qatar Doha Aspire Academy Squash Complex 1992 M
Windy City Open  United States Chicago University Club of Chicago 2001 M/F
El Gouna International  Egypt El Gouna Abu Tig Marina 2010 M/F
Saudi PSA Masters  Saudi Arabia Riyadh PNU Sports Complex 2017 F
North American Open  United States Richmond, Virginia Westwood Club 1966 M
Australian Open  Australia Canberra National Convention Centre 1980 M/F
Brazil Open  Brazil Rio / 1993 M
JSM Super Squash  Japan Yokohama / 1994 M
Mahindra International  India Bombay / 1994 M
Al-Ahram International  Egypt Cairo Giza Plateau (in front of the pyramids) 1996 M/F
Pakistan International  Pakistan Islamabad / 1999 M
PSA Masters / / / New Delhi / 2000 M
Kuwait PSA Cup  Kuwait Kuwait City / 2004 M
Saudi International  Saudi Arabia Al Khobar / 2005 M
Sky Open  Egypt Cairo / 2008 M
British Grand Prix  England Manchester National Squash Centre 2010 M

PSA World Series Ranking Points

PSA World Series events also have a separate World Series ranking. Points for this are calculated on a cumulative basis after each World Series event. The top eight players at the end of the calendar year are then eligible to play in the PSA World Series Finals.

Tournament World Series Ranking Points
Rank Prize Money US$ Ranking Points Winner Runner up 3/4 5/8 9/16 17/32
World Series 150,000 + 625 points 100 65 40 25 15 10


At the same time, the players competing in PSA World Series Events earn world ranking points according to the prize money, classification of the event, and the final position in the draw the player reaches.

Tournament Classification World Ranking Points
Rank Prize Money US$ Ranking Points Winner Runner up 3/4 5/8 9/16 17/32 33/64 Last Rnd Q.
PSA World Championship $325,000 + 21,660 2,890 1,900 1,155 700 410 205 125 75
PSA World Series $150,000 - $324,999 15,970 2,625 1,725 1,050 640 375 190 - 115
PSA Cup $170,000 - $324,999 16,300 2,200 1,500 900 640 390 200 120 -

World Series Finals

Men's

YearLocationChampionRunner-upScore in final
2018 Dubai Mohamed El Shorbagy Ali Farag9–11, 11–3, 11–9, 11–8
2017 Mohamed El Shorbagy James Willstrop12–10, 11–9, 11–8
2016 Grégory Gaultier Cameron Pilley11–4, 11–5, 8–11, 11–6
2015World Series Finals were not held
2014
2013 Richmond Ramy Ashour Mohamed El Shorbagy15–17, 11–7, 11–4, 11–5
2012 London Amr Shabana Nick Matthew4–11, 11–2, 11–4, 11–7
2011 Amr Shabana Grégory Gaultier6–11, 12–10, 11–7, 7–11, 11–8
2010[1] Nick Matthew / Amr ShabanaDid not played[2]
2009 Grégory Gaultier Thierry Lincou11–6, 8–11, 11–5, 11–5
2008 Grégory Gaultier Amr Shabana11–9, 11–8, 11–8
2007 Manchester Ramy Ashour Grégory Gaultier11–10 (2–0), 11–8, 4–11, 11–4
2006 London Anthony Ricketts Lee Beachill11–7, 6–11, 11–4, 11–10 (2-0)
2005 Jonathon Power Thierry Lincou11–7, 11–6, 11–2
2004 Thierry Lincou Joe Kneipp10–11 (0–2), 11–9, 11–2, 11–1
2003 Jonathon Power Peter Nicol15–11, 10–15, 13–15, 15–4, 15–14
2002 David Palmer Thierry Lincou15–9, 10–15, 15–7, 10–15, 15–4
2001 Peter Nicol David Palmer15–7, 15–11, 13–15, 17–14
2000 Peter Nicol Simon Parke13–15, 15–9, 15–12, 12–15, 15–12
1999 Peter Nicol Ahmed Barada15–8, 9–15, 15–9, 15–11
1998 Hatfield Jansher Khan Simon Parke15–12, 13–15, 15–11, 15–10
1997 Jansher Khan Brett Martin9–7, 9–5, 9–2
1996 Del Harris Brett Martin10–8, 7–9, 9–4, 6–9, 9–2
1995No competition
1994 Zurich Jansher Khan Peter Marshall8–15, 15–8, 15–7, 15–9
1993 Jansher Khan Chris Dittmar15–10, 10–15, 15–13, 15–8

Women's

YearLocationChampionRunner-upScore in final
2018 Dubai Nour El SherbiniRaneem El Weleily3–11, 8–11, 11–7, 11–4, 11–6
2017 Laura Massaro Nour El Sherbini11–8, 12–10, 11–5
2016 Laura Massaro Raneem El Weleily9–11, 11–6, 5–11, 12–10, 11–5
2015World Series Finals were not held
2014
2013
2012 London Nicol David Laura Massaro11–3, 11–2, 11–9
2011 Nicol David Madeline Perry11–9, 11–9, 11–9
gollark: I feel betrayed, insulted and betrayed.
gollark: Someone with 4 modems can measure the distance of a transmitted message to each of them and do the same thing.
gollark: Your computer can infer its position from its distances to some fixed GPS servers at known coordinates.
gollark: CC GPS. Real world GPS is trickier.
gollark: As Anavrins said, the maths involved in GPS is very symmetric.

See also

References

  1. Tournament moved from December to January 2011
  2. "BBC Sport - Squash - Queens World Series final scrapped after wind damage". BBC News. 2011-01-16. Retrieved 2011-11-26.
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