Gohar, who has reached the finals in all competitions in 2022, trailed early in the third, but the 25-year-old registered six unanswered points to restore composure and lead two games to one heading into the fourth.

Diego Elias (left) on his way to a tough win over Mohamed ElShorbagy. Photo: Dickson Lee

But just when the capacity crowd at the Hong Kong Squash Centre was expecting an equally epic deciding game, El Hammamy had other ideas. The 22-year-old reeled off five straight points to take a solid lead and sent Gohar packing with a convincing 11-9, 8-11, 7-11, 11-8, 11-2 victory.

“It was a physically and mentally tough match,” El Hammamy said.

“I was confident with myself in the deciding game, tying the match in the fourth gave me a huge push, just happy with the way I played.”

The 84-minute match saw El Hammamy triumph for the fifth time in her last seven matches against Gohar – this after she lost the first seven between the two.

Joining El Hammamy as a first-time finalist in Hong Kong will be Elias, who twice came back from a game down to knock out England’s ElShorbagy.

In a rematch of the Singapore Open final, ElShorbagy drew first blood to take the opening game. World No 5 Elias put up a fight in the second to rattle off eight consecutive points to level the score.

Nour EI Sherbini (left) stunned world No 1 Joelle King in the semi-final of the Hong Kong Squash Open. Photo: Dickson Lee

ElShorbagy, who triumphed in Hong Kong four times on five previous occasions, resumed his lead in the third game. The 31-year-old held a commanding 4-0 lead early in the fourth game, but before he knew it Elias took the game with a stunning 11-1 run.

Elias, a Singapore Open finalist, snatched four crucial points to seize control in the deciding game. The 26-year-old sealed a place in the final with a 7-11, 11-3, 6-11, 11-5, 11-7 win.

“I had a game plan, but it took me a while to start using it,” Elias said.

“He started very fast, similar to how he played in Singapore. I had a game plan and it took me a while to start using it. I think by the end I did what I wanted to do and I’m really happy with the win.

Elias will play Egypt’s Mostafa Asal in the final. The world No 4 stunned tournament top seed Paul Coll 7-11, 11-5, 11-7, 5-11, 11-4 in an epic 72-minute battle.

In the women’s final, El Hammamy will play fellow compatriot Nour El Sherbini in an all-Egyptian encounter after the world No 2 snapped New Zealander Joelle King’s winning streak with a 8-11, 11-3, 11-8, 11-7 win in less than 50 minutes.

King, the reigning champion of the event after lifting the title in 2018 when it was last held, stood toe-to-toe with El Sherbini throughout, and got to within a point at 8-7 as she aimed to try to force a decider.

An error from the New Zealand No 1 gave El Sherbini a crucial two-point cushion and the Egyptian notched three points without reply to tee up a meeting with El Hammamy.

The last time King lost a match was the semi-finals of the US Open in October.