The Asian Age

Sindhu clinches India Open title, beats Olympic champion Carolina Marin 21-19, 21-16

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

P.V. Sindhu personifie­d grit and power, as she came up with a heartening show to defeat reigning Olympic badminton champion Carolina Marin 21-19, 21-16 in the final of the $325,000 India Open Superserie­s at Siri Fort Sports Complex grounds here on Sunday evening.

A lot was on Sindhu’s mind as she set up a mouth-watering clash with Spain’s Marin, the latter having conquered the Indian in the gold medal match at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

The 21-year-old Sindhu, who has grown in strength and stature gradually, had avenged her Olympic final loss getting the better of Marin in the Dubai Superserie­s a few months back, but Sunday was different.

Playing in front of home crowd and a maiden India Open title at stake, Sindhu knew she would have to come up with a superlativ­e show. And when she took the courts in front of screaming fans, she oozed confidence, skill and power.

The Olympic silver medallist opened up early leads in both the games and even though Marin almost caught up with the home star on several occasions, Sindhu was notches above on the day.

The Hyderabadi lass was quick on her feet, showed better reflexes and backed by a game of powerful smashes, overpowere­d her fancied opponent to lift her maiden India Open crown. The win also helped her narrow her head-to-head record with Marin to 4-5.

In the men’s singles, Denmark’s Viktor Axelsen defeated Tien Chen Chou of Chinese Taipei 21-13, 21-10 in 36 minutes to claim his maiden India Open title.

In the women’s singles, Marin was guilty of committing plenty of unforced errors with Sindhu’s deft drops and powerful crosscourt smashes holding her in good stead.

In the opening game, Sindhu took to a 6-1 lead before Marin found her way back. The shuttlers fought hard and Sindhu went into the break with a 11-9 lead.

Locked 16-16 and Marin giving no space to the home girl, the battle intensifie­d and the Spaniard went ahead for the first time at 19-18.

Sindhu, however, relied on a smash and drop shot at come level at 19-19, before wrapping up the game in quick time.

In the second game, Sindhu appeared sharper and took a 4-0 lead. The script was synonymous to the opening game with Marin fighting her way back and making it 6-7 bringing the fans on the edge of their seats.

Sindhu though raised her game at this point and blew her opponent away going ahead at 11-9. From there on, it was one way traffic as Sindhu marched to a 20-15 lead before closing the game at 21-16, raising her arms in triumph.

It was a very intense first game and it was crucial that I won it. It was a close encounter and tied at 19-19, any of us could have won it from here. We were not in the mood to give it away and played long rallies and eventually I came out on top.

P.V. SINDHU after the win

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 ?? — BIPLAB BANERJEE ?? P.V. Sindhu exults after winning the YonexSunri­se India Open final against Spain’s Carolina Marin in New Delhi on Sunday.
— BIPLAB BANERJEE P.V. Sindhu exults after winning the YonexSunri­se India Open final against Spain’s Carolina Marin in New Delhi on Sunday.

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