Irish squash player
Madeline Perry |
Country | Ireland |
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Born | (1977-02-11) 11 February 1977 (age 47)
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Residence | Halifax, England |
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Turned pro | 1998 |
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Retired | 2015 |
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Plays | Right Handed |
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Coached by | Marcus Berrett |
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Racquet used | Dunlop |
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Highest ranking | No. 3 (April 2011) |
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Title(s) | 9 |
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Tour final(s) | 23 |
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Updated on September 2019. |
Madeline Perry (born 11 February 1977 in Banbridge, Northern Ireland) is a former professional squash player from Northern Ireland. She was raised in Northern Ireland and lives in Philadelphia.[citation needed]
In November 2006 at the World Open in Belfast, she justified her seeding of eighth by reaching the quarter-finals. She then won the Irish Open 2007 title in Dublin. One of her career highlights is defeating Nicol David in the quarter-finals of the Forexx Dutch Open where she took the world number one to 9–7 in the fourth set before beating David with a 6-11, 12-14, 15-13, 11-5, 11-9 scoreline.[1] However, a serious head injury sustained when Madeline was mugged in Milan, Italy, put a halt to the rest of the season.[2]
The inactivity caused a dip in her ranking that took her out of the top ten after nearly two years. In her first event back in 2008, in the Buler Challenge in Hong Kong, she reached the final. A year later, Perry described her quarter-final victory over then-ranked No. 1 Nicol David in the five-set, 76-minute quarter-final of the 2009 British Open as "the best victory of my career".[3] (Perry lost the final to Rachael Grinham.)[4] She then made it to the semis of the Seoul Open, followed by the semi-final berth at the CIMB Singapore Masters from an unseeded position and, by April 2011, Perry had reached a career-high world ranking of No. 3.[5][6] In April 2014 she made squash history as the oldest female player to retain a top 10 position, when she was ranked No. 9 in the world.[7]
Major World Series final appearances
Outcome
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Year
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Opponent in the final
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Score in the final
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Runner-up |
2009 |
Rachael Grinham |
11–6, 11–5, 12–10
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Outcome
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Year
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Opponent in the final
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Score in the final
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Runner-up |
2011 |
Nicol David |
11–2, 11–7, 11-3
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See also
References
External links