Junior Squash
For all junior details, see the dedicated junior website:
SquashRocs.
As with any sport, juniors are the life blood and future of the sport.
So it is one of my main aims to get more juniors playing squash in
the Rochester area.
If you think you can help with this effort, please do contact me.
If you have any juniors that would like to play (or simply try) some
squash,
be them your own juniors, a social group or a school party,
please do contact me and I will be happy to organise whatever we can.
I am always looking for players and contacts with the local
middle and high schools,
in order to build some Rochester junior teams.
Q) At what age can juniors start playing squash ?
A) I would say from around the age of 8,
a junior can really start playing squash and enjoying the game fully.
But there is no reason why younger juniors can not come on a squash court
and start doing some racket based skills.
I have a range of balls specially designed for juniors/beginners.
By the age of 9 there are tournaments to play in too.
We have started some local high school squash teams
and are building a good body of squash playing juniors in Rochester.
The next closest area for junior squash is Buffalo,
where they have several high school teams and tournaments.
In February 2016 we took a Rochester junior team over to Buffalo for
the first inter city junior squash team match.
See the Buffalo Squash Racquets Association (BSRA)
High School Squash web site.
Other popular areas for squash and junior tournaments are:
New York City, Boston and Toronto -
so there are plenty of oppertunities to travel with squash.
Nationally, junior squash is growing rapidly with support from the
national governing body - US Squash:
https://www.ussquash.com/junior/.
See this overview from US Squash:
HighSchoolSquash.pdf.
Some information about high school squash:
In June 2010, the USA won the World Junior Women's Squash Championship.
Amanda Sobhy (17, Sea Cliff, New York) defeated
Nour El Tayeb (17, Cairo, Egypt)
in four games to win the 2010 World Junior Women's Squash Championship
in Cologne, Germany.
500,000+ players, and the numbers are growing every year.
Participation in junior squash tournaments is up over 40% in the
last year alone.
Five year figures are 196% growth for boys, 179% growth for girls.
The number of junior tournaments was up over 30% last season.
More than 150 high schools have programs,
public schools in Connecticut,
New York and New Jersey now recognizes squash as a varsity sport.
Squash offers strong social, community and networking aspects,
and the sport is broadening its reach to new audiences.
National Teams performing at their peak in 2011:
Mens team finished 7th in the world (best finish since 1993),
Junior Womens team finished 2nd in the world (best finish ever).
Squash is growing in the US, and offers an excellent alternative to
basketball and hockey, as it can be played all year round.
Squash does not require investment in facilities, many private and
commercial clubs partner with schools across the country for court usage
in non-peak times.
And after high school, they might be interested in moving on to
College level squash:
New York Times article recognises squash as a growing sport at the
varsity level (Dec 2007).
See the New York Times Article.
More than 200 colleges and universities have courts, and the number of
schools offering programs is likely to increase by 15% in the next 3 years.
In the last decade, men's participation in the College Squash
Association, the sport's governing body, has almost doubled, from 36 teams
in 2000 to 66 in 2010.
The number of teams in women's squash - considered an
"emerging sport" by the NCAA -
has increased from 28 to 39.
U of R mens varsity team has placed in the top 4 US college teams for
several recent years.
U of R ladies club team started in 2009 (coached by myself).
Squash is a very international game,
the U of R student team has players from many countries:
North America, South America, Europe, Asia…