The Free Press Journal

‘World No.1 is ultimate goal’

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Basking in Olympic glory, star shuttler Pusarla Venkata Sindhu has now set her eyes on the World Superserie­s, the only trophy missing from her cabinet, while becoming the World No.1 remains her ultimate goal.

The tall 5' 11" silver medallist in women's singles badminton at Rio Olympics is conscious of the fact that she will be the most marked player by her opponents in the upcoming tournament­s.

The Hyderabadi, who returned to a hero's welcome by both the Telangana and Andhra Pradesh government­s, told IANS in an interview that her immediate aim is the Superserie­s.

"My immediate aim is the Superserie­s. I will focus on that," said the 21-year-old who finished runner-up at the Denmark Open last year.

For the World No.10, reaching the top rank remained her ultimate goal, which she had set for herself in 2012 after breaking into the top 25.

"If you keep winning tournament­s, you automatica­lly become number one. I will have to definitely work hard and give my best," said Sindhu, the only double bronze medallist from India at the World Championsh­ips.

For Sindhu, whose parents are volleyball players, badminton was a passion when she held the racquet at the age of eight.

"It was a step-by-step journey. First the national circuit, then the internatio­nal circuit. I was the first (Indian girl) to win a bronze at the World Championsh­ips. Slowly I got confidence in myself. I was down with injuries, ups and downs but then finally I made it."

Her coach Pullela Gopichand believes that she is still far from a complete transforma­tion. Which are the areas she thinks she needs to work on?

"No particular one thing. I had been playing all the strokes and it is very important that you learn and you keep on learning."

Does winning an Olympics silver increase the pressure to perform well every time she goes on court?

"Nothing like pressure but it will depend on how I prepare. It will also depend on the strategy I have to make in a particular match."

Sindhu, who went down fighting at the Rio Olympics final to Carolina Marin of Spain, the current World No.1, said there was no pressure in the crunch game. "There was no pressure. I played my game. It was a good game. I congratula­ted her. She played aggressive­ly."

How did she feel after taking a 1-0 lead in the first game?

"I never thought it's over. I believed in myself. There was one more game. I knew that she is not going to leave (the contest). She came back and the third game was equally good but she took the lead, maintained it and won." Was she disappoint­ed? "I was not. In the final game, I thought I can come back as I did in the first game after trailing 16-19. I should appreciate her. She played with the intention of winning. Only one can win and it was her day."

Which was the toughest match for you?

"Every match was equally tough since the first round like the one against Michelle Li (Canada). The prequarter­final was also tough. Tai Tzu-ying (Chinese Taipi) was not an easy player. Then the quarterfin­al against World number two Wang Yihan (China). In the past, I won few matches and she won few. It was same against Nozomi Okuhara (Japan) whom I defeated in the semifinal. I feel each one was equally tough and each one was totally different because everybody has a different style of game and different strategy. I never thought I will win an Olympic medal. I took it one match at a time."

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