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Friday, November 15, 2024

Begornia rallies to reach finals of Begornia rallies to reach finals of 5th SEA Cup Squash 5th SEA Cup Squash

Reymark Begornia came back from the grave yesterday, rallying past fancied Malaysian Muhammad Amir Aminul bin Azhar, 7-11, 12-10, 11-6, 11-8, 11-6 to reach the men’s singles finals of the 5th Southeast Asian Cup Squash Championships at the Kerrys Sports courts inside the Shangri-la at the Fort Hotel in Taguig City.

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Begornia rallies to reach finals of Begornia rallies to reach finals of 5th SEA Cup Squash 5th SEA Cup Squash
Reymark Begornia (right) prepares to execute a shot against his rival during the 5th Southeast Asian Cup Squash Championships at the Kerrys Sports courts inside the Shangri-la at the Fort Hotel in Taguig City.

Living up to the PH squad’s moniker of “Kayod Pilipinas,” Begornia scrambled  out of a  0-2 hole in outlasting Azhar in 61 minutes of riveting play in the singles semifinals to gain a crack at the country’s first gold in the six-nation competition organized by the Philippine Squash Academy.

It was a splendid follow-up win for the Pinoy racket-wielder, who ousted top seed and compatriot Robert Begornia in the quarterfinals last Tuesday, and will try to sustain his amazing run in the tourney backed by the Philippine Sports Commission, Philippine Oympic Committee and the MVP Sports Foundation.

Begornia will gun for his first ever major title later in the evening against Singaporean 13th seed  Benedict Chan, who subdued Indonesia’s Satria Bagus Laksana, 11-5, 2-11, 11-9, 11-3, in the meet also backed by Alaska, Salming, TV 5, DOOH, Jollibee, Meralco and Dunlop, the official ball.

Yvonne Alisa Dalida absorbed a straight-set 6-11, 4-11, 5-11 setback to Malaysian No. 5 seed Noor Ainaa Amani Binti Ampandi in women’s singles semis.  Nevertheless, her finish was worth a bronze for the country first medal in the competition serving as a test event for the 30th Philippine Southeast Asian Games.

“I never gave up so I am very happy for this result because I never thought I could get this far,” said Begornia after his thrilling comeback triumph over the 16-year-old Malaysian, who wilted in the face of the hometown bet’s endgame onslaught.

He could have made the match shorter had he not squandered leads of 9-5 and 10-8 in the second set, allowing the Malaysian to stage his own rally in reeling off fourth straight points and move within a set of advancing to the championship round.  

“Begornia showed a lot of self-belief by not getting himself down after that close loss in the second set,” noted national coach Manu Yam. “I merely told him to move on and play it patiently because I knew the Malaysian would eventually break down once Macmac (Begornia’s nickname) applied the pressure.”

Shrugging off the second-set loss, Begornia played like a man possessed in the succeeding three sets, combining both power and finesse in picking Azhar apart while often pouncing on the Malaysian’s vulnerable backhand.     

When the Malaysian threatened at 8-10 in the fourth set, the Filipino refused to yield and reeled of two straight points in slamming the door over his fading foe.

In the deciding fifth set, Begornia was in a zone,  breaking away from a 6-5 count by going on a decisive 5-1 run with a variety of shots to wrap up the match.

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