The Free Press Journal

SINDHU ENTERS SEMIS WITH WIN OVER SAINA AT INDIA OPEN

- PTI

Rio Olympics silver medallist P V Sindhu on Friday prevailed over Saina Nehwal in straight games in a muchantici­pated clash to advance to the semifinals of the India Super Series badminton tournament here.

In a high-voltage contest, Sindhu showed why she is considered the badminton queen of India as she notched up a 21-16 22-20 win over Saina in a 47-minute women's singles quarterfin­al clash which was cheered by a sizable crowd who thronged the Siri Fort Sports Complex today.

The third seeded Indian emerged as the lone hope for the hosts after men's singles player Sameer Verma's gallant fight against Denmark's Anders Antonsen ended in a 22-24 19-21 loss in the men's singles quarterfin­als here.

China Open champion, Sindhu will face second seeded Korean Sung Ji Hyun in the semifinals tomorrow. Sindhu has a 6-4 record against Hyun but the Indian had lost to the Korean in their last meeting at the Dubai Super Series Finals.

Saina, a London Olympics bronze medallist, tried her best to break the resilience of Sindhu but the young Hyderabadi was always a step ahead as she used her reach to retrieve the shuttles and also came up with some delectable strokes to outdo her senior pro.

Playing her sixth tournament after recovering from the career-threatenin­g knee injury, Saina never looked in discomfort as she covered the forecourt well and played some exceptiona­l strokes. After losing the opening game, Saina set herself well for a comeback but she served at the net and then misjudged a line call while 20-19 up at the second game to lose the contest.

"Overall it was a very good match. She was leading from the beginning but I always believed in myself. I did not leave any shuttle. Even when Saina was leading 20-19, I still had the belief that I could pull through. I can do it," said Sindhu.

It was an even battle early on as they moved neck and neck till 9-9 but Sindhu then grabbed a point at both side of the court to enter the break at 11-9.

Saina was left doing the catching up job after that as she left ample space in the court for Sindhu to exploit and also failed to curb her unforced errors. In the end, it was a point at the forecourt which gave Sindhu the bragging rights.

With the crowed shouting 'Saina' and 'Sindhu' in equal measure, the second game saw Saina surging ahead to a 4-1 lead. However, the 26year-old Saina struggled to keep the shuttle inside the court and allowed Sindhu to narrow the gap to 6-5.

Saina produced a few body smashes and eventually entered the break with a 11-7 lead. The 2010 Commonweal­th Games champion managed to keep her nose ahead till 19-16 when she picked up a point at the net. But Sindhu then came up with two smashes which left an outstretch­ed Saina failing to connect with her backhand.

An error at the net and Sindhu had clawed back at 19-19. Saina then grabbed the game point by once again sending a return to Sindhu's body which she failed to negotiate.

However, Saina failed to grab the opportunit­y as her serve got buried at the net and then she misjudged a baseline call which handed the advantage to Sindhu, who sealed the next point with a powerful down-theline smash to shut the door on Saina.

Saina and Sindhu have met just once in an internatio­nal competitio­n -- at the 2014 Syed Modi Internatio­nal. Saina had won that match in straight games. They had played against each other in PBL early this year and Sindhu had emerged victorious.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? PV Sindhu celebrates her win over Saina Nehwal in the quarterfin­al match of the Yonex-Sunrise India Super Series badminton tournament at the Siri Fort Sports Complex in New Delhi on Friday.
PV Sindhu celebrates her win over Saina Nehwal in the quarterfin­al match of the Yonex-Sunrise India Super Series badminton tournament at the Siri Fort Sports Complex in New Delhi on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India