Times of Oman

Sindhu’s Olympic silver medal marks a glorious year for Indian badminton

It turned out to be a watershed year for Sindhu, who reached the upper echelons of world badminton with a silver medal at Rio Olympic Games

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NEW DELHI: P. V. Sindhu cemented her position as a dominant force on the world stage with an Olympic silver medal while Saina Nehwal continued to battle with injuries in a year, which saw Indian badminton take giant strides at the global platform.

It turned out to be a watershed year for Sindhu, who reached the upper echelons of world badminton with a silver medal at Rio Games — an achievemen­t also for her mentor and chief coach Pullela Gopichand, who became the only Indian coach to produce two Olympic medallists.

On the other hand, for the first part of the year, it was Saina’s battle with injuries which dominated the headlines even though she was considered to be the best bet for India at Rio. The Indian ace fought against time to recover from an Achilles tendons and went on to win the Australian Super Series.

Despite her two bronze medals at the world championsh­ips, Sindhu, meanwhile, was still considered one of the hopefuls but not a serious contender for the gold medal, partly because of her early exits from tournament­s in the runup to the Games.

But Olympics had contrastin­g fates awaiting the duo. While Saina exited in the second round and later it came to light that she had a bone chip floating inside her knee area, Sindhu went on to become the first Indian shuttler to win a silver at Games and with the feat she finally stepped out of the Saina’s shadow.

In the months after that, Saina underwent a surgery in Mumbai and spent a long time in rehab, while Sindhu basked in her Olympic glory.

Besides the Olympic feat, Sind- hu also etched her name in history books, becoming only the third Indian to win the China Open, her maiden Super Series Premier title and then reached the finals at Hong Kong Open and finished as semifinali­st in her debut World Super Series Finals at Dubai.

“It has been a fantastic year for me, because winning a medal at the Olympics is a big achievemen­t. It’s a dream come true. Also, I always had in mind that I wanted to win a Super Series title and that also was fulfilled (at the China Open),” Sindhu said.

“Definitely, the aim is to become No.1. I have achieved my careerbest six, so I am really very happy. I wish this can continue and I can continue improving further.”

Besides Sindhu’s meteoric rise, Saina clinching the Australian Super Series and K. Srikanth reaching the quarterfin­als at Rio and winning the Syed Modi Internatio­nal championsh­ip at Lucknow, H. S. Prannoy bagging the Swiss Open Grand Prix Gold at Basel were the highlights of the year in which Indian badminton achieved unpreceden­ted success.

In men’s singles, Saurabh Verma recovered from a long injury lay-off to bag the Chinese Taipei Grand Prix and finish runners-up at Bitburger Open.

B. Sai Praneeth also won his maiden title at Canada Grand Prix and Sameer Verma crowned himself the Senior National champion before finishing runner-up at Hong Kong Open and Ajay Jayaram finished runner-up at Dutch Open Grand Prix.

Indian badminton also made new breakthrou­ghs in the season gone by with the men’s doubles pair of Manu Attri and B. Sumeeth Reddy winning the Canada Open and becoming the first Indian men’s combo to qualify for the Olympics.

The mixed doubles combinatio­n of Pranaav Jerry Chopra and Sikki Reddy also had a memorable year as they won two Grand Prix titles at Brazil and Russia and finished runners-up at Scotland Open. The young Ruthvika Shivani Gadde also claimed the women’s singles title in Russia as India continued to tick the right boxes.

The Indian women’s team also clinched a bronze medal for the second time after suffering a 0-3 defeat at the hands of defending champions China in the semifinals of the Uber Cup at Kunshan in May.

While Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnappa also made it to the Olympics for the second successive edition but the year saw the celebrated women’s doubles pair split early last month and pair up with Manu and Sikki respective­ly.

There were also others such as Commonweal­th Games champion P. Kashyap and Glasgow bronzemeda­llist RMV Gurusaidut­t, who battled throughout the year to get back to full fitness.

Fitness issues also spoilt the performanc­es of Srikanth, who suffered an ankle injury at Japan Open and was ruled out for the rest of the year, and Prannoy, who had recovered from a back issue and toe injury only to hurt his back again during the Macau Open.

“It’s been a challenge year for men shuttlers. Many of them have played many tournament­s, trying to qualify for the Olympics, that actually somewhere made dents in their fitness,” Gopichand said.

“We had Sameer and Saurabh Verma do well. They could have been more consistent, but they all have played very well in different times and it augurs well for Indian badminton. Hopefully, we will get consistenc­y (in future),” he said.

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DOMINANT FORCE: P. V. Sindhu

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