Hashim Khan
A small, polite, balding man who
became an indomitable athlete with a racquet in his hand, Hashim Khan won 7
British Open squash titles and was the patriarch of a family dynasty that
dominated the sport for decades.
Khan overcame the disadvantages of an
impoverished background in a remote part of what was then colonial India to
achieve international success in an elitist sport at an age when most players
would be contemplating retirement. In doing so, he became a national icon and
an inspiration for future generations of Pakistani squash players, more than a
few related to him.
Hashim Khan was born in the small
town of Nawakille, near Peshawar, which at the time was part of India. His
father, Abdullah, was a steward at a club built for officers guarding the
Khyber Pass. After his father died, the 11-year old Khan left school and worked
as a ball-boy to earn money for the family, being paid a pittance for
collecting squash balls that had sailed out of the outdoor courts.
When it was too hot for the officers
to play, Khan found an empty court and taught himself squash using a broken
racquet and a damaged ball. One story has it that some officers drunkenly
walked past the courts one evening and saw the barefoot youngster hit backhand
after backhand impeccably despite pitch-dark conditions.
He progressed to become a coach at
the club but remained a virtual unknown during his twenties. His big break came
when Abdul Bari, a visiting professional from Bombay, turned up looking for a
game and the thirtysomething Khan beat him even after giving him a 50-point
head start.
Bari spread the word about Khan and
he was invited to take part in the All-of-India tournament in Bombay in 1944.
He won that competition 3 times in a row, but was no longer eligible after
India won independence from Great Britain in 1947, which led to the foundation
of Pakistan. Khan returned to the Royal Air Force club. 4 years later, seeking
to burnish the young nation’s pride and international renown through sporting
success, the Pakistani government selected him to represent the country at the
British Open in London, which was then considered to be the sport’s world
championships.
Wearing shoes on court for the first
time, the 5ft 5in Khan was an underdog in the final, where he faced an Egyptian
who had won the title in each of the past 4 years, Mahmoud el Karim. Yet Khan
won easily, 9-5,9-0,9-0, benefiting from the stamina which he had built up
during years of playing for hours in the blazing sun. He went on to win the
next 5 British Opens. He finished runner-up in 1957 but reclaimed the crown the
following year, when he was in his mid-forties. He also won 3 United States and
3 Canadian Open titles.
Khan’s improbable brilliance was
eulogized in a New Yorker article in
1973: ‘To an American, he looked nothing at all like an athlete, let alone a
super-athlete. A round-headed, baldish man with a high-bridged nose and dark,
serious eyes, he was squat in build,’ the writer recalled. ‘Particularly since
he was barrel-chested and had the suspicion of a pot-belly, he seemed curiously
top-heavy. When he moved, though, the whole picture changed. It was not that he
was exceptionally graceful or smooth but that he was beautifully co-ordinated.
His strokes were sound, his reflexes were quick, he was indecently fast of
foot, and no amount of exertion seemed to bring a bead of sweat to his brow.’
In one of his favourite training
exercises, Khan would stand a racquet upside down against the wall at the
corner of the court and hit the ball from long-range into the tiny gap between
the racquet’s handle and the edge of the side wall. He was known for his
idiosyncratic command of English, in which his sentences often missed out
words. A 2009 documentary about him alluded to that trait in its title, which
was one of his mantras: Keep eye on ball.
Khan moved to the US in the 1960s
when he was offered a coaching position in Detroit. He later settled in the
Denver suburb of Aurora, where he died of congestive heart failure. Hi precise
age is uncertain: his relatives told the AP news agency that he had never had a
birth certificate, but they celebrated his birthday on July 1st.
Their best guess was that he was born in
1914, though some reports suggest 1910.
He competed in the British Open
over-60s championship in 2001 when in his mid-eighties. In an exhibition match
in 1983, when in his mid-sixties, he beat the best female player in America,
Alicia McConnell, who was 19. Even after suffering a broken hip late in life he
played squash into his early 90s. Khan raised 12 children with his wife of 65
years, Mehria, who died in 2007. All 7 sons became squash players, most notably
Sharif, who won the North American Open 12 times. The ‘Khan Dynasty’ has
claimed 23 British Open titles. Khan taught his younger brother, Azam, to play
squash. Hashim beat him in 3 finals before Azam won 4 consecutive Opens
1959-62. Hashim’s cousin, Roshan, and nephew,
Mohibullah, each won once and a cousin’s son, Jahangir, took 10 titles
between 1982 & 1991. Jansher, another Khan from Peshawar, though no
relation, dominated squash in the 1990s.
‘Barely 3 years after Pakistan’s
independence in 1947, he became our first-ever sporting hero in 1951 and
whatever tribute we can pay will not match his great contribution in inspiring
a whole generation,’ Jahangir said.