Belgium Create History While Malaysia Stun England To Make World Team Semis
12 Dec 2024

Sisters Nele Coll and Tinne Gilis starred as Belgium reached the semi-finals of the WSF World Team Championships for the first time as the No.3 seeds fought back from a match down to defeat hosts Hong Kong.
European champions Belgium had not contested this event for 20 years but have entered a women's side in this year's event - which is the first in championship history to feature the men's and women's competitions simultaneously - thanks in no small part to the prolific recent form of Coll and Gilis, who have risen as high as world No.4 and world No.5 in the PSA World Rankings in recent months.
On the indoor glass court at Hong Kong Football Club, Coll - married to New Zealand No.1 and men's world No.4 Paul Coll - came in with Belgium one match down in the tie after Tsz-Wing Tong defeated Chloe Crabbe in straight games.
Coll did not let the situation faze her, though, with the 28-year-old quickly taking down Hong Kong No.1 Tomato Ho to draw Belgium level.
Younger sister Tinne then finished what Nele had started, crushing the home crowd's hopes with a comprehensive 11-4, 11-6, 11-6 win against Chan Sin Yuk.
Belgium will face defending champions Egypt in the semi-finals after the top seeds made short work of France on the outdoor glass court, as Amina Orfi and Hania El Hammamy overcame Enora Villard and Melissa Alves to secure a quick win.
"It means a lot after having not participated for so long. It's a new adventure and then to reach the semi-finals the first time we did it, it's great!" said Belgium Coach Ronny Vlassaks.
The other women's semi-final will be contested by last year's runners up USA and No.5 seeds Malaysia after USA cruised past India and Malaysia defeated No.4 seeds England, ending the five-time champions run of making the last four of every World Team Championship they'd ever contested.
England's Lucy Beecroft, a late addition to the team after an injury to England No.1 Georgina Kennedy at last week's Hong Kong Open, started well against Aira Azman before falling to the shot-making 20-year-old.
Asian Games champion Sivasangari Subramaniam then completed the win, finally finding her best form after a challenging tournament so far to overcome Sarah-Jane Perry 4-11, 11-7, 11-8, 11-6.
In the men's event, No.4 seeds Switzerland came through a testing encounter with No.6 seeds Colombia.
World No.50 Yannick Wilhelmi gave Switzerland - who last year reached the semi-finals for the first time - the lead with a decisive win over world No.81 Matias Knudsen.
Colombia hit back brilliantly in match two via veteran Miguel Rodriguez, with the 38-year-old surviving a fightback from Dimitri Steinmann to win in five games, before Nicolas Mueller recovered from a slow start against Ronald Palomino to record a 3/1 win to send Switzerland through.
Switzerland will face last year's runners up England after the No.2 seeds sent hosts Hong Kong out courtesy of wins for Curtis Malik and Mohamed ElShorbagy.
The other men's semi-final will be between defending champions Egypt and France, after Egypt overcame Germany 2-0 and France beat India by the same scoreline.