The Free Press Journal

Saina and Sameer enter final of Syed Modi Internatio­nal

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Former three-time winner Saina Nehwal and reigning champion Sameer Verma were a step away from clinching the men’s and women’s singles titles respective­ly, reaching the finals of the Syed Modi Internatio­nal World Tour Super 300 here on Saturday.

Commonweal­th Games silver medallists Satwiksair­aj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty and Gold Coast bronze medallists Ashwini Ponnappa and N Sikki Reddy also progressed to the summit clash in men’s doubles and women’s doubles respective­ly.

Third seed Sameer, who won titles at Swiss and Hyderabad this year, saw off Indonesia’s Chico Aura Dwi Wardoyo 21-13, 17-21, 21-8 in a 57-minute men’s singles semi-finals.

The world number 16 Indian, who needs to win the title to qualify for the year-ending HSBC BWF World Tour Finals, will face sixth seeded Chinese Lu Guangzu in the summit clash. If he wins the title, Sameer will displace Japan’s Kenta Nishimoto at No.8 in the Race to Guangzhou Rankings.

Saina, seeded second, also prevailed over another Indonesian Ruselli Hartawan 12-21, 21-7, 21-6 to set up a meeting with China’s Han Yue, who defeated compatriot Li Xuerui 21-15, 19-21, 21-9 in another semi-final.

Men’s pair of Satwiksair­aj and Chirag stunned London Olympics silver medallists Mathias Boe and Carsten Mogensen of Denmark 22-20, 25-23 to secure their maiden place in a Super 300 final. It was their first win over the celebrated Danish pair in five attempts.

The Indian duo, who had won a Super 100 title at Hyderabad, will face second seeded Indonesian combinatio­n of Fajar Alfian and Muhammad Rian Ardianto in the men’s doubles finals.

Ashwini and Sikki also made it to their second successive finals here with a 2118, 21-16 win over Russian combinatio­n of Ekaterina Bolotova and Alina Davletova in women’s doubles. Ashwini, however, couldn’t progress to the finals of the mixed doubles event after she and her partner Satwiksair­aj Rankireddy went down narrowly 12-21, 21-18, 19-21 to the Chinese pair of Ou Xuanyi and Feng Xueying in the semi-finals early in the day.

World No. 9 Saina found the going tough in the beginning and conceded a 5-2 lead. She tried to claw back but Ruselli managed to hold a 11-7 advantage at the first break and then pocketed the opening game, much to the disappoint­ment of the crowd. Jolted by the reversal, Saina gathered her wits and dished out a dominating game after an initial 4-4 battle with her Indonesian opponent.

The decider was no different with Saina continuing her domination, moving to 82 at one stage before accumulati­ng the next eight points to take the match away from her opponent.

 ??  ?? Saina Nehwal
Saina Nehwal

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