The Free Press Journal

SINDHU OUT IN RD 1

Beaten by Tzu Ying in World Tour Finals opener

- PFJ NEWS SERVICE

P V Sindhu and Kidambi Srikanth fought their hearts out before suffering close defeats in their respective group 'B' openers at the US $ 1.5 million HSBC BWF World Tour Finals here on Wednesday.

A week after a demoralisi­ng defeat at the Toyota Thailand Open quarterfin­als, world champion Sindhu produced a much-improved performanc­e but still lost to world number one Tai Tzu Ying of Taiwan 21-19 1221 17-21.

It was Sindhu's 16th defeat to Tzu Ying in 21 meetings.

Olympic silver medallist Sindhu, who had won the prestigiou­s title in 2018, will next play home favourites Ratchanok Intanon, who had handed her a humiliatin­g defeat last week, was happy with the outing. "It was a good match, there were no easy points. In the third game I came back and it was just one point difference at one stage. I broke my racket strings twice (during rallies) and that made a difference. Otherwise, it was a good game," said Sindhu after the match.

The opening game was a close fight as Sindhu and Tzu Ying engaged in an enticing battle. The Taiwanese managed to lead the game for most part but Sindhu kept breathing down her neck before reeling off four points on the trot to claim the game.

Tzu Ying led 5-3 early on before grabbing a 11-8 advantage at the interval as Sindhu lost a few points on the net.

After the break, Tzu Ying jumped to a 14-10 lead with Sindhu making an error in her judgement at backline and also the Taiwanese producing a backhand cross court return.

Sindhu drew parity at 16-16 with a run of points, highlighte­d by a crisp cross court slice and a backhand return.

Tzu Ying again moved ahead but two precise smash helped the Indian make it 19-19 as she grabbed the game point with another precise return that kissed the backline.

Sindhu then played a cross court return at the net which her opponent couldn't reach to gain the upper hand in the match.

Tzu Ying came out all cylinders blazing to grab a 6-0 lead in the second game. Sindhu managed to reduce the deficit to 3-7 before the Taiwanese unleased a couple of drops and a smash to make it 9-4.

Two unforced errors from Sindhu handed a 11-4 advantage to her rival at the break. Tzu Ying continued to exert pressure on the Indian to move to 19-9 before winning the second game with a cross court return to level the match.

In the decider, Tzu Ying again led 6-3 but she stumbled to some defensive errors as Sindhu again levelled the score 6-6 with a smash.

However, the second seed Taiwanese held a 11-9 lead at the break after Sindhu made another error in her judgement at the backline.

After the change of sides, Sindhu managed to keep the two-point difference till 13-15 before a lucky net cord and a weak return at the net by Sindhu gave Tzu Ying a 17-13 lead.

It will be followed by the knockout, with the top two players/pairs from each group making it to the semifinals.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India