All England Championships: Sindhu, Saina aim to break 18-year-old jinx

Sindhu will face Sung Ji Hyun of South Korea in the first round while Saina, seeded eighth, will start her campaign against Scotland’s Kristy Gilmour.

Published : Mar 05, 2019 14:24 IST , Birmingham

Saina Nehwal has been in fine form winning the Indonesia Masters title and beat Sindhu in the Nationals final.
Saina Nehwal has been in fine form winning the Indonesia Masters title and beat Sindhu in the Nationals final.
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Saina Nehwal has been in fine form winning the Indonesia Masters title and beat Sindhu in the Nationals final.

A challenging draw stands in the way but India’s top shuttlers P.V. Sindhu and Saina Nehwal will nonetheless fancy their chances of ending a nearly two-decade old title jinx at the All England Open Championships starting Wednesday.

It was Sindhu and Saina’s mentor and current chief national coach P. Gopichand, who was the last Indian to win the championship back in 2001.

Only the top 32 in the Badminton World Federation (BWF) rankings qualify for the tournament and out of them, only three Indians have been seeded -- the third being Kidambi Srikanth (seeded seventh) in the men’s event.

Fifth-seeded Olympic and world championships silver-medallist Sindhu will square off against former world number 2 Sung Ji Hyun of South Korea at the $1 million event.

London Olympics bronze-medallist Saina, seeded eighth, will start her campaign against Scotland’s Kristy Gilmour.

- Tricky encounters -

The star shuttlers have had contrasting results against their first-round opponents.

While Saina enjoys a 6-0 overall record against Gilmour, Sindhu has been troubled by Sung Ji but leads 8-6 in their previous 14 encounters.

Sung Ji defeated Sindhu twice in three meetings last year and if the Indian can put it past the Korean, she will run into either Russian Evgeniya Kosetskaya or Hong Kong’s Cheung Ngan Yi in the second round.

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A favourable result will then pit Sindhu against third-seeded Chinese youngster, Chen Yufei in the quarterfinals.

The Indian had lost to Chen at the 2018 China Open and will be wary of the Chinese despite enjoying a 4-3 head-to-head record.

“Each round will be comparatively tough. Each point is important to me. I am playing Sung Ji Hyun in the first round and it would be important for me to focus from the first round,” said the 23-year-old, who had reached the semifinals in the last edition.

SINDHUjpg
P.V. Sindhu ended 2018 with the BWF World Tour Finals title.
 

Sindhu has been in red-hot form last season, winning silver medals in multiple tournaments and finishing the year with the BWF World Tour title. Former world number 1 Saina remains the only Indian to come close to winning the prestigious title, finishing runners-up in 2015.

The seasoned Hyderabadi enjoyed a good start to the year, winning the title at the Indonesia Masters in January and beating Sindhu to the nationals singles title.

Saina, who turns 29 on March 17, will face either Denmark’s Line Hojmark Kjaersfeldt or China’s Cai Yanyan if she wins the first round.

While Saina has an edge over the Dane, she has never faced Yanyan before.

The vastly experienced Indian is expected to cross at least the second round and is likely to face her nemesis Tai Tzu Ying, against whom she has lost 12 consecutive times.

The Chinese Taipei shuttler enjoys an overall head-to-head record of 14-5 against Saina.

- High hopes for Srikanth -

KIDAMBIjpg
Srikanth had a decent start to the new season reaching quarterfinals in two tournaments.
 

In the men’s event, Srikanth will take on Frenchman Brice Leverdez in the opening round while an in-form Sameer Verma will start against former world champion and world no.1 Viktor Axelsen of Denmark.

After a poor 2018, Srikanth had a decent outing in Malaysia and Indonesia, reaching the quarterfinals. He would look to find his best form during the week.

Sameer, who had reached the knockout stage of the World Tour Finals, will be playing his first BWF event of the season.

Among others, B. Sai Praneeth and H.S Prannoy will face each other in the opening round.

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While Praneeth would be hungry to put his Senior Nationals’ disappointment behind him, Prannoy has been battling with a breathing problem triggered by a Gastro-Esophageal Reflux Disorder (GERD). He would be eager to put on a good show before leaving for his medical treatment in the USA.

Chief coach Gopichand has already pinned his hopes on Saina, Sindhu and Srikanth. He feels the trio has what it takes to end the country’s 18-year wait for the prestigious trophy.

“We have had good performances from Saina, Sindhu and Srikanth has also been in good form. I do expect that we will have a good performance at this year’s All-England,” Gopichand had said last month.

In women’s doubles, Ashwini Ponnapa & N Sikki Reddy will play the seventh-seeded Japanese pair Shiho Tanaka and Koharu Yonemoto, while Meghana Jakkampudi and Poorvisha S Ram will square off against Russia’s Ekaterina Bolotova and Alina Davletova.

In men’s doubles, former National champion Manu Attri and B. Sumeeth Reddy will face China’s Ou Xuanyi and Ren Xiangyu in the first round.

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