I actually don't understand why the commentators keep insisting the 21:01 decision was a No Let. Elaraby clearly mentioned that Amina held her hand (intentionally or unintentionally), and in the video review we can clearly see that she was holding the racket hand in 21:27. How was she even allowed to play the ball? "Exaggerated swing" reasoning is such BS when there's direct interference.
Aminah is cheating. Her backhand hitting always blocking her opponent. And Aminah movements always blocking her opponent too. Bad progress for the world of squash
I thought the same. She is learning all of those small dirty movement tricks. She needs to just simply play and let the results happen. She is young to be going down an ugly path.
Why are all the young players from Egypt despicably unlikeable? Also, the refereeing was great, the commentary on the other hand should probably be improved.
The commentators in this particular match are far from making any sense when it comes to these let situations etc that the girls are asking for. They would do well to shut up and leave it to the referees, they're far too opinionated and wayward with their comments, an annoying commentary altogether.
Of all the stupid things I've seen in the comments of PSA videos, saying the commentators shouldn't commentate on reffing decisions is definitely up there. I would say most of their takes were valid and its quite literally their job to commentate on whats happening in the match. You really want them to be silent during all reffing, which is almost every other point???
@@PeterP.-xx5wi Hi Peter, the point being, that this day and age the referees are literally 'hell bent' on the players playing the ball regardless of possible injury with their racket(swing) to their opponent(who is within striking distance in a lot of cases, they're in the way and crowding either intentionally(or otherwise) or just in the wrong place at the wrong time, it's an obsession with officials that I've seen come to be over the last few years. So who loses out with the 'no let, you had room to play the ball' decision, the player who is the striker, it's ludicrous and makes a mockery of commonsense logic and the rules of the game of squash, and it should not be that way at all. Admittedly there are some malevolent players from time to time who will hunt for the stroke and deliberately hold their shot(and swing) for far too long, but that's not the case with these two girls. Hearing the diatribe from the two commentators about these occurrences in the match I found nauseating, waxing lyrical about it as if it's something set in squash dogma 'you must play the ball at all costs', what BS. Overall this stupidity does nothing for the game and anyone watching the sport would be likely to think geez, the other girl could get whacked hard with the racket if she(the striker) took a swing at it. All the best.
Aminah grabbed the racquet that was SO clear
I actually don't understand why the commentators keep insisting the 21:01 decision was a No Let. Elaraby clearly mentioned that Amina held her hand (intentionally or unintentionally), and in the video review we can clearly see that she was holding the racket hand in 21:27. How was she even allowed to play the ball? "Exaggerated swing" reasoning is such BS when there's direct interference.
21:01 How is that No Let? Unable to understand the reasoning, since similar decisions in previous rallies went as 'Stroke'
06:12 That's gotta hurt
Aminah is cheating. Her backhand hitting always blocking her opponent. And Aminah movements always blocking her opponent too. Bad progress for the world of squash
I thought the same. She is learning all of those small dirty movement tricks. She needs to just simply play and let the results happen. She is young to be going down an ugly path.
There was definitely stroke at 21:01, not no let. Shame on him for that poor refereeing performance.
We players cant clear our butt stroke for sure.
Why are all the young players from Egypt despicably unlikeable?
Also, the refereeing was great, the commentary on the other hand should probably be improved.
Who’s winning???!
Rowan won
The commentators in this particular match are far from making any sense when it comes to these let situations etc that the girls are asking for. They would do well to shut up and leave it to the referees, they're far too opinionated and wayward with their comments, an annoying commentary altogether.
Of all the stupid things I've seen in the comments of PSA videos, saying the commentators shouldn't commentate on reffing decisions is definitely up there. I would say most of their takes were valid and its quite literally their job to commentate on whats happening in the match. You really want them to be silent during all reffing, which is almost every other point???
@@PeterP.-xx5wi Hi Peter, the point being, that this day and age the referees are literally 'hell bent' on the players playing the ball regardless of possible injury with their racket(swing) to their opponent(who is within striking distance in a lot of cases, they're in the way and crowding either intentionally(or otherwise) or just in the wrong place at the wrong time, it's an obsession with officials that I've seen come to be over the last few years. So who loses out with the 'no let, you had room to play the ball' decision, the player who is the striker, it's ludicrous and makes a mockery of commonsense logic and the rules of the game of squash, and it should not be that way at all. Admittedly there are some malevolent players from time to time who will hunt for the stroke and deliberately hold their shot(and swing) for far too long, but that's not the case with these two girls. Hearing the diatribe from the two commentators about these occurrences in the match I found nauseating, waxing lyrical about it as if it's something set in squash dogma 'you must play the ball at all costs', what BS. Overall this stupidity does nothing for the game and anyone watching the sport would be likely to think geez, the other girl could get whacked hard with the racket if she(the striker) took a swing at it. All the best.