World Tour Finals | 06/27 23:45 | - | Mostafa Asal v Joel Makin | 0-1 | |
World Tour Finals | 06/27 23:30 | 1 | Mostafa Asal v Joel Makin | 0-2 | |
World Tour Finals | 06/26 22:20 | 2 | Mostafa Asal v Karim Abdel Gawad | 2-0 | |
World Tour Finals | 06/25 21:30 | 3 | Mostafa Asal v Youssef Soliman | 2-1 | |
World Tour Finals | 06/24 20:45 | 2 | Mostafa Asal v Garcia/ Mladenovic | 2-0 | |
World Tour Finals | 06/23 20:45 | 1 | Marwan ElShorbagy v Mostafa Asal | 0-2 | |
British Open | 06/08 13:45 | 1 | Mostafa Asal v Diego Elias | 1-3 | |
British Open | 06/07 14:00 | 2 | Mostafa Asal v Joel Makin | 3-1 | |
British Open | 06/05 17:15 | 3 | Mostafa Asal v Youssef Ibrahim | 3-0 | |
British Open | 06/03 13:30 | 9 | Mostafa Asal v Miguel Rodriguez | 3-0 | |
British Open | 06/01 17:15 | 8 | Mostafa Asal v Jonah Bryant | 3-2 | |
Palm Hills Squash Open | 05/27 17:15 | 1 | Mostafa Asal v Karim Abdel Gawad | 3-1 |
Mostafa Asal (Arabic: مُصْطَفَى عَسَل; born 9 May 2001) is an Egyptian professional squash player. A two-time World Team Champion, and current rank one squash player, Mostafa is nicknamed "The Raging Bull" for his controversial play style and contemptible on-court behavior, having injured multiple opponents and serving multiple suspensions for serious offenses.
Mostafa Asal won the British Junior U17 Open 2018, the PSA10 2018 Mar del Plata Open, PSA10 2018 Regatas Resistencia Open, the 2021 Men's PSA World Tour Finals, and the 2021 U.S. Open Squash Men's Championship.
In January 2021, Asal accepted a two-month suspension from the PSA following on-court disciplinary matters.
Asal reached the semi-final of the 2022 PSA Men's World Squash Championship, where he lost to the eventual champion Ali Farag.
In the 2022 U.S. Open, Asal lost a match for inflicting an injury on Lucas Serme, his opponent, by hitting him with a shot up the middle of the court, striking Serme in the head and resulting in a concussion and perforated eardrum.
In the CIB Egyptian Open in September 2022, where Asal lost to Ali Farag in the semi-finals, Asal's father, Mahmoud Asal, was suspended after the loss until November 2023 for a courtside confrontation of Husseum Abaza, CEO of CIB Bank and a major squash benefactor.
In January 2023, at the Houston Open, Asal's elbow appeared to connect with Marwan El Shorbagy's groin area, with him being taken off on a stretcher and then to the hospital, and with El Shorbagy commenting, "If this is the future of our sport then good luck." In March 2023, Asal was suspended for 6 weeks by the PSA for violating the code of conduct. Asal also received a fine of £2,000.
However, he returned as the number 1 seed for the 2023 PSA Men's World Squash Championship and reached the semi-final where he was knocked out by Ali Farag. In August 2023 Asal received a 12-week suspension from the PSA tour for abuse of racket or equipment, physical abuse, and dangerous play during his match against Joel Makin in the 2023 world championships and unsportsmanlike conduct in the same event's match with Mazen Hesham. The suspension start date was post-dated to July 18, 2023, and Asal did not appeal the suspension. Mahmoud Asal's father Mostafa released a statement that the suspension was due to a conspiracy by Karim Darwish and an attempt to destroy the future of Asal and prevent him from reaching the top position again.
The Guardian named Asal as one of The Anti-Sports Personality of the Year awards 2023. He spent 18 weeks of the year 2023 suspended from play. His fortunes improved when in December 2023, he was part of the Egyptian team that secured the gold medal at the 2023 Men's World Team Squash Championships in New Zealand.
In May 2024, he reached the final of the 2024 PSA Men's World Squash Championship, losing in the final to Peruvian Diego Elías and in September 2024 Asal won the Paris Squash tournament, beating Ali Farag in the final. In December, Asal won a second world team title at the 2024 Men's World Team Squash Championships in Hong Kong.
In March 2025, Asal won his 19th PSA title after securing victory in the OptAsia Championships during the 2024–25 PSA Squash Tour and the following month won a 20th after victory in the El Gouna International.
Asal's biggest result of his career came when he won his first world title defeating four-time world champion Ali Farag in the 2025 Men's World Squash Championship in Chicago. Video analysis uncovered considerable cheating by Asal, and refereeing that did not hold up to expected standards. Asal did not lose a game throughout the tournament and the best that his opponents could manage was scoring an 8 point game. The last player to go through a world championship unbeaten was Jahangir Khan in 1988. Shortly afterwards in June 2025, he lost in the final of the 2025 Men's British Open Squash Championship to Diego Elías.