PV Sindhu settles for bronze in
World Championship
This is the first time in women's
singles that India is bringing home a medal
India's rising shuttler PV Sindhu settled
for a bronze medal at the World Championships after suffering a straight-game
defeat against world number three Ratchanok Inthanon in the semifinals of the
prestigious event on Saturday.
However, all of 18, Sindhu stamped her
credentials as the new giant-killer on the scene, by becoming the first
shuttler from the country to make the World badminton championship semifinals
in the women's singles. This is only the third time - and the first in women's
singles - that India will be bringing home a medal from the Worlds, following
the bronze-medal winning feats of Prakash Padukone in Copenhagen in 1983 and
the Jwala Gutta-Ashwini Ponnapa doubles combine in 2011. India's biggest badminton
stars - Saina and Parupalli Kashyap - were defeated in the quarterfinals
earlier.
World number 12 Sindhu, playing in her
maiden World Championships, had notched up stunning victories against two
Chinese players in the run-up to the semifinals but she failed to out it cross
Ratchanok, going down 10-21, 13-21 in a 36-minute women's singles match.
Ratchanok mixed her strokes well and moved
smoothly across the court. Sindhu, on the other hand, committed too many
unforced errors allowing her opponent to move into the interval at 11-4 in the
opening game.
Ratchanok used her deceptive shots to
flummox Sindhu, who struggled in anticipation. The Indian failed to gauge the
Thai girl's game and also ended up hitting the shuttle wide and out to allow
Ratchanok to move to 19-10.
Ratchanok was accurate and played some
sensational strokes to leave Sindhu without any answer. Sindhu tried to match
Ratchanok in the rallies but the Thai girl was always a step ahead with her
wide array of strokes.
Leading 19-12, Ratchanok earned eight match
points when Sindhu's shuttle went out again. Sindhu saved one match point with
a smash but Ratchanok soon grabbed the last point with a jump smash which caught
Sindhu off-guard.
Ratchanok, 18, is the first shuttler from
her country to be assured of a silver at the World Championship. The Thailand
girl won the India Open in New Delhi and also the Thailand Open Grand Prix Gold
this year. She is also a three-time world junior championship gold-medallist.
She is also a silver-medallist from the 2010 Asian Games.
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