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Multiple NESCAC Coach of the Year Awards: Tennis and Squash. Two- Time Olympic Coach of the Year. Hartford World Team Tennis Coach. U.S.A. World Team Squash Coach. U.S. National Squash Coach; Recipient of the Gold Key Award from the Connecticut sports writers guild. Has raised three million dollars to endow his own Chair "Paul D. Assaiante ...
This is a list of sports officials who died while active. This list is organized alphabetically by the sport the individual officiated in, and notes the deaths in chronological order within each sport.
Orla O'Doherty née Brown (born 1971) is a former Irish American professional squash player who also currently serves as a squash professional coach and personal trainer [1] She played squash in Ireland during her early days as a teenager and also played in the US in her late 40s after moving to the US in 1993.
In 1980, she won the Canadian Racquetball Championship, which she won again from 1982 to 1985. In 1980, 1981, and 1984, she won the US Professional Racquetball Championship. [7] In 1985, she moved back to Australia. That year, she became an assistant coach for squash at the Australian Institute of Sport in Brisbane, with Geoff Hunt as head coach.
Linda Elriani (née Charman; born 21 November 1971 in Eastbourne, United Kingdom) is a squash coach and former professional squash player from England. As a player, Elriani turned professional in 1990. She appeared in 32 professional tour finals, winning 15 titles. She also won the British National Championship title in 2005. Elriani reached a ...
The famed Howe Cup Championships (formerly known as the Tri-City Squash Championships) was renamed the Howe Cup in honor of the three Howe women-Margaret, Betty and Peggy. This tournament was originally played between top players from Philadelphia-New York-Boston. At that time these cities were the main centers of squash play in the U.S.
Briggs was hired as head squash coach and the assistant tennis coach at Cornell for 4 years starting in 1984. [13] He guided his squash players to a 58–39 record. Under his leadership, the 1987-88 Cornell squash team became the first Cornell squash team to finish nationally in the top 10 (they ranked 9 at the end of their season).
Amanda Sobhy (born June 29, 1993) is an American squash player. A five-time national champion, she was the first U.S.-born player to reach the top five in the Professional Squash Association (PSA) world rankings. [1]