Asia C'ships: Prannoy, Saina fall at semifinal hurdle

The duo settle for bronze after losing to their respective opponents in straight games.

Published : Apr 28, 2018 14:33 IST

H.S. Prannoy lost to Chen Long in the semifinal. Photo: AFP
H.S. Prannoy lost to Chen Long in the semifinal. Photo: AFP
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H.S. Prannoy lost to Chen Long in the semifinal. Photo: AFP

H. S. Prannoy   and Saina Nehwal settled for bronze with defeats to their respective opponents at the Asia Badminton Championships.

Saina provided a determined challenge but could not get past World No. 2 and defending champion Tai Tzu Ying of Chinese Taipei, losing 25-27, 19-21 in an edge-of-the seat thriller.

World No. 10 Prannoy paid the price for being too erratic as he went down 21-16, 21-18 to the Olympic champion Chen Long of China in a 52-minute match.

This was Saina's eighth straight loss to Tai Tzu in 16 meetings and her third defeat of the season. She had lost to her nemesis at the Indonesia Open final and the All England Championship this year but unlike those defeats, the one on Saturday turned out to be a much closer contest as Saina gave ample display of her new-found confidence and fitness.

In a fast-paced contest where fortunes fluctuated too often, it was Tai Tzu who made a roaring 4-1 start with her delightful touches. She held on to her three-point advantage at 6-3 before a few loose shots from her helped Saina narrow the gap to one point. However, Tai Tzu grabbed three quick points to lead 9-5 before entering the break at 11-6 after Saina’s attempted drop went wide.

Advantage lost

After the breather, Saina clawed back at 15-15 with a brilliant angled return. From then, Saina kept the pressure on her rival to move to 17-17 and grab a 18-17 lead for the first time.

Saina held a two game-point advantage at 20-18. But Tai Tzu saved one with a drop shot and then Saina made a judgement error to allow Tai Tzu make it 20-20. Saina then sent a return long before Tai Tzu smashed the next one at the net. The duo continued to look for ways to outwit each other as game points exchanged hands. In the end, Saina wasted four chances while Tai Tzu converted on her fourth opportunity to pocket the opening game.

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In the second game, Saina continued in the same vein, adding power to her smashes and riding on her opponent’s errors to grab a 4-3 lead. Tai Tzu covered the court brilliantly and moved to a 10-7 lead when Saina hit wide. But the Indian unleashed an accurate smash next and soon made it 10-9. However, Saina again gave a slender 11-9 lead to Tai Tzu at the break.

Tai Tzu continued with her angled returns and moved to a 13-9 lead before moving to 14-11. Saina gathered a few points with her smashes and soon drew parity at 15-15 when Tai Tzu hit the net. The Indian faltered in a net dribble next before levelling at 17-17 when Tai Tzu missed the line. Another net stroke going to net gave Saina an 18-17 lead. She gathered another point but lost a referral next as she led 19-18.

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At this crucial moment, Saina missed the baseline with her return going out. She made another judgement error at the back line to give two match points to Tai Tzu and lost the match when she again hit wide.

Positive start

Saina's compatriot Prannoy also provided a keen challenge in the semifinals before bowing out. He started on a positive note, opening up a 5-2 lead early on before Chen erased the deficit with three quick points. The Indian tried to be patient during the rallies but he struggled to keep the shuttle inside to allow the Chinese to keep breathing down his neck.

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Prannoy tried to change the pace and angles of his strokes but he faltered in finishing the rallies. The result was that Chen entered the interval with a slender 11-10 lead. The duo continued engaging in some long rallies with both displaying great athleticism and their repertoire of strokes but Prannoy ended up going wide too often as Chen led 15-11.

Costly errors

Chen judged the shuttles well at the lines while errors continued to pile up for Prannoy, allowing the Chinese to open up a five-point lead at 19-14. The Chinese grabbed the game point with a body smash. Prannoy saved two game points, both at the net, but his lift went wide again as Chen earned bragging rights.

After the change of sides, Chen once again jumped to a 3-0 lead. Prannoy won a lucky net chord and then smashed to make it 3-3. Prannoy, however, continued to find the going tough. In the end, it was a blind return on the move by Chen which gave him an 11-6 lead at the breather.

The Indian came out with a barrage of smashes to make it 10-11 but Chen once again moved ahead. At 16-18, Prannoy faltered with a return as Chen moved to 19-16. The Indian handed over three match points to Chen, who converted on his second chance to secure his place in the final.

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