Tokyo 2020 will be tougher than last three Olympics, says Saina Nehwal

Saina Nehwal is still thinking about participating in the Malaysia Open next week after opting out of India Open due to a pancreas infection.

Published : Mar 31, 2019 19:03 IST

Tokyo 2020 will be Saina Nehwal's fourth Olympics.
Tokyo 2020 will be Saina Nehwal's fourth Olympics.
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Tokyo 2020 will be Saina Nehwal's fourth Olympics.

India’s ace shuttler Saina Nehwal says that the competition at next year’s Olympics will be tougher than the last three Games and she is working on fitness and improving her game in the run-up to the showpiece event in Tokyo.

“Yes, it (competition in 2020 Olympics) will be much tougher (than earlier three editions). The Chinese shuttlers are playing really well. More than them, a lot of other girls are playing really well. It is going to be very tough,” Nehwal told PTI in an exclusive interview.

Nehwal underwent surgery to her knee in 2016 and struggled to find form. However, she started 2019 with a set impressive performances winning the Indonesia Masters in January this year, while reaching the quarterfinals of All-England Championship and semis at the Malaysia Masters.

“But as of now, I’m not thinking about Olympics or about how I will qualify for it. I am thinking more about doing well in tournaments, improving my game and keeping myself injury free and fit,” Nehwal said, at the Pramerica Spirit of Community Awards event in Gurgaon.

For India to send two shuttlers in Tokyo Olympics women’s singles, both of them will have to be inside top 16 in the world rankings which will be released after the end of qualification period, on April 30, 2020.

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Tokyo Games will be her fourth Olympics, having represented the country in 2008, 2012 and 2016. She reached the quarterfinals in 2008, won a bronze in 2012 and crashed out in group stages in 2016 when she played with a knee inflammation.

Nehwal skipped the India Open in New Delhi after she developed pancreas infection during the All England Championships earlier this month.

“I am coming out of a pancreas infection and I am planning to play Malaysia Open next week. Let’s see how it happens,” she said.

Asked if she is happy with what has panned out after the surgery in 2016, she said, “I am fighting, trying to improve my game and win as many matches as possible. That is what I can do and the rest I don’t know, because I cannot predict results.

“I’m happy I am being able to win a few tournaments. I did well in CWG (won gold), Asian Games (bronze), Denmark Open finalist and won in Indonesia (Indonesia Masters this year). There were few good results that keep me inspiring and motivating to continue to doing well. The rest I want to take care of my health, improve my game and think of winning my next tournament.”

The cramped badminton calendar following the Badminton World Federation’s decision, which requires top players to feature in at least 12 out of 15 tournaments a year, has been criticised by many shuttlers.

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Parupalli Kashyap (L) has been a constant presence at the coaches chair during Saina Nehwal's (R) matches.
 

Nehwal said she had also taken up the issue with the global governing body but to no avail.

“Our body cannot take so many tournaments in a year. Finally, it a body and not a machine, so it is tough but you have to find ways to be fit for most of tournaments. We (some players) told last year that the calendar can be smaller and money can be bigger in these tournaments. Make it like tennis, like how they have four grand slams,” she said.

“I don’t know why BWF is busy doing these things, different tournaments. Being a player we don’t have the time to sit and speak about it often. We can only focus on the next tournament. Last year we tried to speak in December as well but nothing changed, so we have to go with the routine.”

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Asked how her husband P Kashyap sitting at the coach’s corner in recent tournaments different from national coach Pullela Gopichand, Nehwal said, “Both of them are making really good plans for me. Sometimes you are more comfortable with a friend. Kashyap can be a bit more strict and hard on me because Gopi sir is basically quiet and simple on the court.

“Kashyap knows at the moment I am a little bit scared sometimes to move around after my surgery, sometimes I feel a little bit tense to move. With the way he (Kashyap) can shout at me and make me play, I feel confident.”

She said the move (to be with Kashyap in tournaments) is helping her game.

“I am being able to take some good tips from Kashyap in the last 4-5 months. It has helped my game a bit here and there. I just told Gopi sir that let him help me for few more months and we will see how it changes.

“Change is always helpful, we should keep on changing. That is why he is sitting there.”

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