Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Saina loses as India go down 50 to Japan, bow out

- Press Trust of India

BANGKOK: Saina Nehwal squandered four match points as Indian women’s team bowed out of the Uber Cup after being hammered 5-0 by five-time champions Japan in a group A match, here on Wednesday.

Saina went down 19-21, 21-9, 20-22 to world No. 2 Akane Yamaguchi in the opening match.

Doubles pair Sanyogita Ghorpade and Prajakta Sawant then lost 15-21, 6-21 to world no 4 Ayaka Takahashi and Misaki Matsutomo.

Vaishnavi Reddy Jakka was no match for Nozomi Okuhara and lost 10-21, 13-21 in just 26 minutes as Japan took the match away from India.

In the fourth match, Vaishnavi Bhale and Meghana Jakkampudi went down 8-21 17-21, while Aruna Prabhudesa­i lost 12-21 7-21 to end the proceeding­s.

Meanwhile, China and Japan breezed into the quarters of the Thomas and Uber Cups with unblemishe­d records. Olympic star Chen Long lead from the front with three wins, helping his country to 5-0 wipeouts of Australia, France and India.

The women’s side edged Indonesia 3-2 to enter the knockout rounds. The Indian Premier League attracts cricket’s top talent and provides it a platform to display its skill. This season was special with fearless batsmen executing astonishin­g shots and bowlers using the knuckle ball to great effect. Who in this ‘best versus the best’ carnival stood out, which players would you pay money to watch? Take a look.

AB de Villiers: By far the standout performer, and great to watch. He is elegant and effortless and as the cliche goes, bats with time to spare -- always in position, never hurried, never loses shape. ABD is batsman and Spiderman, an artist and a creative genius who manufactur­es shots others would think are impossible.

Depending on his mood, fast bowlers (140kph plus) are swept or reverse swept, crashed through cover or slogged over mid wicket. A 360-degree stroke player, ABD has so many shots to offer it must be a problem deciding which one to play.

Kane Williamson :IFABDIS delightful­ly unpredicta­ble, Williamson is the opposite. He plays what Sunil Gavaskar calls ‘proper cricketing shots’. Nothing funky or cute, no reverse sweeps or switch hits. Williamson made quality runs with Test match shots executed in fast-forward mode. Not someone who muscles the ball like Gayle/pollard/russell, he was a Mercedes cruising down an expressway. Before this IPL, Williamson was not an automatic choice in SRH starting eleven. This reality is reflected in his meagre ~3 crore contract, the same as U-19 player Khaleel (who hasn’t played a game) and less than teammates Manish Pandey (~ 11 crore) and Deepak Hooda (~3.6 crore).

Rishabh Pant: The new rocket that had a spectacula­r launch, Pant’s numbers are staggering -- 684 runs, a strike rate of almost 180 and more 4s/6s than anyone else. In 14 matches, he hit

IT WAS SPECIAL WITH FEARLESS BATSMEN EXECUTING ASTONISHIN­G SHOTS AND BOWLERS USING THE KNUCKLE BALL TO GREAT EFFECT.

every third ball to the boundary and thrashed Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar, India’s T20 bowling star, for 43 from 11 balls.

KL Rahul: Without doubt the best Indian batsman across formats after Virat.

KL, like his captain, has presence and power, and bowlers have learnt to respect his skills. He is the complete package -- a technicall­y correct batsman who plays with intent. KL is crisp and decisive -- he outscored opening partner Chris Gayle.

Rashid Khan: Leggies are in fashion but the Afghan is in a different zone, tossing up dot balls and asking awkward questions. While other bowlers get smashed, Rashid commands respect by keeping batsmen guessing. He is a match-winning rock star.

MS Dhoni: In a format that defies routine, MSD keeps doing what he does best: controllin­g the game and launching last-minute surgical strikes to finish matches. Nobody owns a cricket ground like he does; his aura is unmatched and while everyone goes ballistic in a tense situation, MSD goes about his business as only he can -- emotionles­s as the Sphinx.

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