Vassar Goes Co-Ed
By Bill Buckingham
In 1969, Vassar College declined an offer from Yale University to merge institutions. Instead it became the first and only of the...
Where in The World Is Jan Koukal?
PSA tour players travel across the world each year to compete in events, but the Czech Republic’s Jan Koukal takes this to a new level....
New Champions At 2013 U.S. Open Doubles
By Chris McClintick
The second annual joint Squash Doubles Association (SDA) and Women’s Doubles Squash Association (WDSA) U.S. Open Squash Doubles Championships crescendoed with the first SDA semifinal...
Masters: Masters Squash Players Lifelong Devotees of our Game
By Richard Millman
In all the marketing blurbs that accompanies our Olympic efforts the game of Squash is described as a life sport.
This name, applied...
Cincinnati Launches New Model of Growth
By James Zug
Neal Tew is the purveyor of a new method of developing squash: the nonprofit club.
Tew grew up playing at the Cincinnati Country...
Access Squash Academy
By Pia A. Floresca
One of the biggest international efforts in squash in the past decade has been the quest to join the Olympic Games....
Going Her Own Way
By Chris McClintick
In the spring of 1922, Howard Roark—the protagonist in Ayn Rand’s 1943 novel The Fountainhead—chooses to leave his architecture school, not compromising...
Snoring Rhinos and Other Tales: a Review of Nick Matthew’s Memoir
By James Zug
Nick Matthew
Sweating Blood: My Life in Squash
Cheshire, England: internationalSportGroup, 2013
It is a shame but inevitable. Like everywhere else in their careers, Nick...
Sea Island Day Dreaming
By James Zug
In searching for a squash vacation in the sun, I found something perhaps unique.
I went down to Sea Island Resort in September...
U.S. Pro Series and Life Time Fitness
By Chris McClintick
When US SQUASH and the Professional Squash Association (PSA) partnered to launch the U.S. Pro Series in January of 2013, the primary...








