Focus on Satwik-Chirag as home shuttlers look to dazzle at India Open

With six titles in 2023, Satwik and Chirag have been a cut above the rest of the Indians, and the runner-up finish at the Malaysia Super 1000 has only spiced things up as the Indian shuttlers look to deliver at home.

Published : Jan 15, 2024 13:50 IST , NEW DELHI - 4 MINS READ

FILE PHOTO: Satwik Sairaj Rankireddy (r) and Chirag Shetty.
FILE PHOTO: Satwik Sairaj Rankireddy (r) and Chirag Shetty. | Photo Credit: PTI
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FILE PHOTO: Satwik Sairaj Rankireddy (r) and Chirag Shetty. | Photo Credit: PTI

Expectations will be high when Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty spearhead the home challenge at the India Open Super 750 badminton tournament beginning here on Tuesday, hoping to annex their first silverware of the new season.

With six titles in 2023, Satwik and Chirag have been a cut above the rest of the Indians, and the runner-up finish at the Malaysia Super 1000 has only spiced things up as the Indian shuttlers look to deliver at home.

The BAI’s flagship tournament, which was upgraded to Super 750 in 2023, proved a dampener last season when none of the Indians could cross the second round.

In the 2022 edition, Satwik-Chirag and Lakshya Sen stood at the podium with the men’s doubles and men’s singles crown and the home shuttlers will hope to once again live up to the expectations and prove that last year was an aberration.

Satwik and Chirag have all the wherewithal to go the distance this time as the duo will be charged up after coming marginally short in the final in Kuala Lumpur on Sunday.

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“We want to do well in our home country next week, so we don’t want to relax with this, we are more hungry and next week we want to do well in front of our home crowd,” Satwik said on Sunday.

Second seeds Satwik and Chirag, who were forced to pull out ahead of the second round last year due to an injury suffered by the former, will face world No. 25 Fang-Jen Lee and Fang-Chih Lee of Taipei in their opening round.

Chirag added: “We are not done yet. India Open is coming up next week and we want to go one better.” While Satwik-Chirag will be one of the frontrunners for the title, all eyes will also be on HS Prannoy, Lakshya Sen, and Kidambi Srikanth in men’s singles, especially in the absence of two-time Olympic medallist P V Sindhu, who is nursing a knee injury.

Having fared poorly in Malaysia, world No. 8 Prannoy and Lakshya will look to find their rhythm quickly, while Srikanth must have got some confidence back following his win over Jonatan Christie in the opening round last week.

Prannoy and Sen will look for a good start, having suffered first-round exits in Kuala Lumpur, when they open against Chinese Taipei’s Chou Tien Chen and Priyanshu Rajawat respectively.

Srikanth, on the other hand, looked in good touch during his opening round last week and it will be paramount for him to go deep into the tournament which he won in 2015, keeping the race to Olympic qualification in mind.

The former world No.1 will open against Hong Kong’s Lee Cheuk Yiu.

It is a two-way race for the second spot in the Olympic qualification with Srikanth, a 2016 Rio Olympic Olympian, currently ranked 24th and Sen ahead at 17th spot. Prannoy at eighth remains the frontrunner.

ALSO READ | Malaysia Open 2024: Satwik-Chirag loses to Liang-Wang in final

The Olympic race in women’s doubles has also heated up with the new pair of Ashwini Ponnappa, a two-time Olympian, and Tanisha Crasto and Commonwealth Games bronze medallists Gayatri Gopichand and Treesa Jolly -- both ranked 14th in Olympic Games qualification.

Ashwini-Tanisha reached three successive finals in December last year and won one of them at the Guwahati Masters.

The duo reached the second round in Malaysia and would look to continue their good run when they take on the world No. 10 Thai combination of Rawinda Prajongjai and Jongkolphan Kititharakul.

Treesa and Gayatri, on the other hand, will cross swords against fourth seeds Nami Matsuyama and Chiharu Shida of Japan.

Viktor Axelsen pulls out

Denmark’s world No.1 shuttler Viktor Axelsen has pulled out of the India Open after falling sick while playing in the Malaysia Open. He had lost in the semifinal to China’s YQ Shi.

“After my match on Saturday, I’ve been laying in bed ill and after talking with the medical team present here in Malaysia, I’ve been advised to get additional checkup,” wrote Axelsen on ‘X’.

Axelsen termed his absence from the India Open “disappointing”. He was handed No. 1 seed in the tournament.

“That means that I unfortunately won’t be able to travel and be present at India Open this year, which is rather disappointing as it has been a tournament where I’ve loved to play in front of the Indian badminton fans.”

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