Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Saina crashes out in semifinals Exhausted Saina blames tough scheduling at Worlds for the loss

Saina puts up brave fight before losing to Japan’s Okuhara, settles for bronze

- Sandip Sikdar HT Correspond­ent

NEW DELHI: Saina Nehwal will have to wait for at least another year to realise her dream of winning a World Championsh­ips title after the Indian shuttler went down in the semi-finals. Saina had to settle for bronze after going down in a slugfest that lasted an hour and 14 minutes in Glasgow.

An all-India final was on the cards after both PV Sindhu and Saina qualified for the semi-finals but those hopes vanished when the 12th seed lost 21-12, 17-21, 10-21 to seventh seed Nozomi Okuhara, who had lost six out of seven meetings to Saina before Saturday’s match.

The World No.12 Japanese came out with her best game and tired out Saina to proceed to her maiden World Badminton Championsh­ips final. In the process, Nozomi has defeated the two women who played the final of the last edition of the Worlds (Saina and Spain’s Carolina Marin) in consecutiv­e matches.

Saina however should not lose heart as she has become only the second Indian after Sindhu to have won multiple World Championsh­ips medals. She had to settle for silver in 2015.

Ever since her knee injury at the 2016 Rio Olympics, Saina has not been able to regain her winning edge. However, reaching the last four stage at this prestigiou­s event and returning with a bronze is no mean feat for a shuttler who never dropped out of the world’s top-10 until now.

The 27-year-old took off brilliantl­y in the first game. Saina moved well, did not give her opponent chances and kept her on the edge throughout the first

game. The former World No 1 showed glimpses of playing like the Saina of old. She took the game 21-12.

Nozomi had to fight back in the second game, and she did well. The Japanese, who won a bronze at Rio Olympics, made sure she stayed in the lead, however slender it was so that it would help her close the game.

Saina levelled the game four times but her opponent, younger to Saina by five years, won four straight points from 17-17 to push the semi-final into the decider.

The momentum had shifted and with that Saina’s intensity too had dropped. After dominating the first game, she allowed Nozomi to fight back and level the match.

Saina started exactly the way she would have wanted to in the third game, with a 3-0 lead.

But she was tired by then. The agility she had displayed in the first game evaporated. Simultaneo­usly, Nozomi found a surge of energy and won nine straight points to go 10-3 in the lead.

At this point the Japanese seventh seed was clearly outplaying Saina who had nothing going her way. Nozomi made Saina run around a lot and bagged the contest to move into the final. NEW DELHI: Saina Nehwal complained about scheduling at the World Badminton Championsh­ips after losing her women’s singles semi-final to Japanese Nozomi Okuhara in Glasgow on Saturday.

“Clearly when you play tough matches, it is tiring. I thought we would play in the second session but scheduling was kept like that. (It is) surprising because we do not have enough time to recover and take the necessary steps because I just could not. I just slept,” the 2012 London Olympics bronze medallist said after her loss.

Saina, who won silver at the 2015 Worlds, had played a marathon match on Friday when she defeated local player Kirsty Gilmour in a match that lasted an hour and 14 minutes. It was played in the evening session.

However, she was back on Saturday, but this time in the morning session.

“Well it is okay because it is the same thing with her (Nozomi), so no excuse for that. I also got tired because of the match yesterday which was quite tough. She (Kirsty Gilmour) was hitting good smashes for which I had to bend a lot; that way it was quite tough for me,” added Saina.

Commenting on the semi-final, the Hyderabadi said that she tried her best but her opponent proved better on the day.

Earlier, Saina admitted she should not have gone to Rio Olympics in 2016 where she suffered a shock second round exit and aggravated her injury, forcing her out of the circuit for several months.

“Only I know what I went through. I shouldn’t have gone to Rio. I didn’t know I had a major injury. The belief of my parents and coach helped me get back. I still have tendonitis in the (right) knee,” Saina said. GREATERNOI­DA: Joshna Chinappa cruised to her 15th women’s singles title while Saurav Ghosal secured his 12th men’s singles crown at the National Squash Championsh­ips on Saturday. Chinappa and Ghosal were stretched in the finals by Lakshya Ravendran and Mahesh Mangaonkar, respective­ly.

Chinappa, who had lost to Dipika Pallikal in the final last year, regained the trophy with a 11-6, 8-11, 11-2, 11-4 win. She is now one shy of equalling Bhuvneshwa­ri Kumari’s record of 16 national titles. Ghosal got the better of Mangaonkar 11-8, 11-13, 11-9, 11-6.

NO MEDAL FOR INDIA PARIS: India ended their campaign at the World Wrestling Championsh­ips without a single medal after Bajrang Punia lost his repechage round in men’s 65kg freestyle on the final day of the competitio­n. Incidental­ly, this is the second successive World Championsh­ip

BAGAN-EB DERBY

KOLKATA: The season’s first derby between arch-rivals Mohun Bagan and East Bengal in the Premier Division of the Calcutta Football League will take place on September 24. The Indian Football Associatio­n, however, is yet to announce the venue . It is likely to be in Siliguri. Defending champions East Bengal are currently leading the table.

LAHIRI MISSES CUT NEWYORK: Anirban Lahiri continued to miss short putts and missed the cut at the Northern Trust, the opening FedExCup Playoffs event on the PGA Tour. Lahiri added a four-over 74 to his first round 75 and crashed out of the event.

PATNA PIRATES WIN MUMBAI: Patna Pirates registered their first win of the Mumbai leg of the season five of Pro Kabaddi League, trouncing Tamil Thalaivas 35-24 .

 ?? AFP ?? Saina Nehwal won the first game but lost the next two in her World Championsh­ip semifinal defeat to Japan’s Nozomi Okuhara in Glasgow on Saturday.
AFP Saina Nehwal won the first game but lost the next two in her World Championsh­ip semifinal defeat to Japan’s Nozomi Okuhara in Glasgow on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India