Cassie Jackman

Cassie Jackman
Country  England
Residence Norwich, England
Born December 22, 1972 (1972-12-22) (age 39)
North Walsham, England
Turned Pro 1990
Retired 2004
Plays Right Handed
Racquet used Prince
Women's singles
Highest ranking No. 1 (January, 2000)
Last updated on: March 3, 2010.

Cassie Jackman (born 22 December 1972 and competing in some years as Cassie Campion) is a former English squash player who won the World Open in 1999. She has been England's leading player throughout much of the 1990s and early 21st century. She retired due to a recurring back injury in December 2004.

Contents

Career

Born in North Walsham, Norfolk, England, Cassie was such a talented youngster that her coaches would match her against boys. She won the world Junior Women's crown in 1991, and a year later the legendary Susan Devoy claimed she was good enough to replace her at the top of women's squash, but Cassie found it hard going, losing the 1994 World Open final to Michelle Martin 9–1, 9–0, 9–6.

She had no luck in he 1996 World Open final either, losing to Sarah Fitz-Gerald 9–4, 9–2, 4–9, 9–6 who would go on to win another four World Opens. At the 1998 Commonwealth Games she won a gold medal in the doubles with Sue Wright, and a bronze in the singles.

1999 saw Cassie gain her only World Open title, beating her great rival Michelle Martin 9–6, 9–7, 9–7 in Seattle. However, she was disappointed not to land the British Open when she lost to Leilani Joyce in the final in Aberdeen.

In 2000 she held the number one ranking player position throughout much of the year. Later that year saw the occurrence of a back problem that required surgery. Much of 2001 was spent recovering from that. 2003 saw Cassie reach the final again, but she lost out to Carol Owens 3–9, 9–2, 9–7, 9–3.

World Open

Finals: 4 (1 title, 3 runner-ups)

Outcome Year Location Opponent in the final Score in the final
Runner-up 1994 Guernsey Michelle Martin 9–1, 9–0, 9–6
Runner-up 1996 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Sarah Fitz-Gerald 9–0, 9–3, 9–4
Winner 1999 Seattle, United States Michelle Martin 9–6, 9–7, 9–7
Runner-up 2003 Hong Kong Carol Owens 3–9, 9–2, 9–7, 9–3

See also

External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Michelle Martin
Leilani Rorani
World No. 1
January 2000 - October 2000
February 2004 - July 2004
Succeeded by
Carol Owens
Rachael Grinham