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Emma Beddoes is bright, bubbly and devoted to the sport which provides her with a livelihood and travel around the world. Enthusiasm quickly turns to frustration, though, when the 25-year-old British professional confronts the disagreeable reality that squash will not be featured in next year's London Olympics. "I think I'm going to emigrate before the Olympics are in London," Beddoes lamented during an interview in the deserted bar of her local club on a freezing afternoon in Nottingham. "It's going to be too depressing."
Squash, a racquet and ball indoor sport, is derived from the much older game of rackets, which in turn made an improbable journey from the walled yards of London taverns and prisons in the early 19th century to the privileged surroundings of Harrow school.
Spread throughout the world, partly by Britain's armed forces, squash combines ball skills, agility and brutal physical demands.
With this in mind it would appear an ideal Olympic sport and, in an admittedly random straw poll, several British sports enthusiasts expressed astonishment that it was not an Olympic sport although it is played in the Commonwealth Games.
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"When you talk to people they say they are so looking forward to 2012, it takes everybody by surprise, everybody just assumes it's in the Olympics," commented world No 3 women's player Alison Walters in a telephone interview.
"If we were in the Olympics it would be massive for the sport. We don't get enough publicity, basically, and that's a big, big part of it. If it were an Olympic sport it would make a massive difference."
Peter Nicol, who was the world No 1 for 60 months, agrees.
"People who you think would know, don't. They just assume that because of badminton and tennis and table tennis, squash is in there," he said.
Exotic champions
Tim Garner is a former professional who, among other activities, is the director of the annual Canary Wharf Classic in the English capital.




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