Career
Her biggest successes were winning the in 1991 and four consecutive from 1985-1990. Until the rise of Cassie Campion she was England"s number 1 player. Born and raised in Guernsey, she was coached in her early years in the game by Regional Harbour.
In international competition, she represented England.
She was awarded an Administration Member of the Order of the British Empire for services to squash in the 1995 New Year"s Honours List. In later years she was coached by Gavin Dupre from Jersey.
They began working together in Guernsey and Lisa later spent time training with him in Germany where he was based as a professional coach. She reached the 1981 semi-final but lost to Rhonda Thorne 9-2, 9-0, 9-4.
This was to be the first in a series of near-misses for Lisa, as she reached two finals but lost both times to the New Zealand squash legend Susan Devoy – in 1985 (9–4, 9–5, 10–8) and 1987 (9–3, 10–8, 9–2).
The also provided much heartbreak. That same year she finished second in the Sports Journalists Award, with the athlete Liz McColgan coming first. Finals: 2 (0 title, 2 runners-up)
Finals: 5 (1 title, 4 runners-up)
Finals: 6 (4 titles, 2 runner-up).