Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Thomas Cup: Great Danes stunned, India in first final

Injured Prannoy does star turn in deciding rubber to seal a 3-2 victory for Indians

- Sandip Sikdar

NEW DELHI: With the semi-final tied at 2-2, HS Prannoy slipped and fell awkwardly while trailing 4-11 in the first game of the deciding fifth rubber against Denmark. A doctor was called. His heel strapped after medical timeout, the Indian shuttler lost 13-21. At that point, India’s hopes of reaching a maiden Thomas Cup final looked all but over.

But just like Thursday, the world No. 23 staged a sensationa­l comeback to defeat Rasmus Gemke 13-21, 21-9, 21-12 in an hour and 13 minutes to take India to the final of the prestigiou­s biennial tournament, also known as the World Men’s Team Championsh­ips, for the first time since the first edition in 1949 with a 3-2 victory over former champions Denmark on Friday.

An elated Indian team rushed on to the court to hug Prannoy just as his sliced drop crossed the net with Gemke unable to reach the shuttle. In the final at the Impact Arena in Bangkok, India will face the most successful team in the history of the tournament, 14-time winners and defending champions Indonesia who beat Japan 3-2. India is only the ninth team ever to reach the final and will aim to become only the sixth outfit to lift the trophy on Sunday.

The contest

Both teams retained the winning combinatio­n which had propelled them into the last four. Up against world No. 1 Viktor Axelsen, Lakshya Sen had a tall task to overcome the reigning Olympic champion especially after losing the opening rubber in the quarter-final against Malaysia on Thursday. Though the 20-year-old has beaten the former world champion in the German Open last March, Friday was different. The Dane dominated the promising Indian youngster, giving the 2016 champions a 1-0 lead in the semi-final with a 21-13, 21-13 win in 49 minutes.

Axelsen was quick on his feet and changed the direction of play constantly. Sen wasn’t able to cope and made wayward errors. Dispirited, Sen ran out of ideas to give up and hand Axelsen a sixth win in seven meetings. But just like Thursday, Satwiksair­aj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty provided India the win that got them off the mark. In the first doubles rubber, the world No. 8 combinatio­n beat Kim Astrup and Mathias Christians­en 21-18, 21-23, 22-20 in a marathoner that lasted an hour and 18 minutes. Though in better rhythm than the Danish pair, they wasted five match points finally converting the sixth.

“In all the games, we started off really slow. The first nine points in both the games we were down 9-3 or 9-4 but from there we got our rhythm. The second game we should have finished off at 20-18 but a few jittery moments and they took the game away from us. But the way we got back in the third game, it couldn’t have gotten any better. We kept calm and stuck to our plan,” said Shetty.

In a battle between two world championsh­ip silver medallists, it was Kidambi Srikanth who came out on top, beating world No. 3 Anders Antonsen 21-18, 12-21, 21-15 in an hour and 20 minutes to give India a 2-1 lead. Probably the most tactical player on the circuit, Antonsen fought hard but the former world No. 1 Indian was far more proactive on the day much to the delight of his team. Indian’s second doubles pairing of Krishna Prasad Garaga and Vishnuvard­han Goud Panjala proved to be the weak link yet again, going down to Anders Skaarup Rasmussen and Frederik Sogaard 14-21, 13-21 in 39 minutes. Though a scratch pair, the experience of the world championsh­ip bronze medallist Rasmussen mattered in the crucial encounter, allowing Denmark to level the contest at 2-2. So again it came down to Prannoy, who after losing the first game found the spring in his step to beat Gemke 13-21, 21-9, 21-12 in an hour 13 minutes. Prannoy’s win, his second in four meetings against the Dane, came with a points spree in the second and third games. Taking advantage of Gemke’s loose defence, which went missing as the match progressed, the shuttler from the Kerala was easily able to close the game.

 ?? BADMINTONP­HOTO/BWF ?? Indian players celebrate after beating Denmark in the Thomas Cup semi-final in Bangkok on Friday.
BADMINTONP­HOTO/BWF Indian players celebrate after beating Denmark in the Thomas Cup semi-final in Bangkok on Friday.

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