Sindhu lone Indian survivor, Kashyap suffers another injury

Two-time bronze medallist at the World Championship, PV Sindhu is the only Indian survivor at the event after she reached the quarterfinals, defeating Michelle Li of Canada 21-9, 21-17 in a one-sided encounter last night.

Published : Mar 04, 2016 14:42 IST , Mulheim an der Ruhr (Germany)

Kashyap is being attended by physiotherapist Dr. Johnson Solomon but the extent of his injury is still not clear.
Kashyap is being attended by physiotherapist Dr. Johnson Solomon but the extent of his injury is still not clear.
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Kashyap is being attended by physiotherapist Dr. Johnson Solomon but the extent of his injury is still not clear.

Two-time bronze medallist at the World Championship, PV Sindhu is the only Indian survivor at the event after she reached the quarterfinals, defeating Michelle Li of Canada 21-9, 21-17 in a one-sided encounter last night.

Seventh seed Sindhu will now face fourth seeded Chinese Wang Shixian.

There was no respite from injuries for ace Indian shuttler Parupalli Kashyap, who retired hurt midway through the German Open pre-quarterfinals here, dealing a fresh blow to his Olympic qualification hopes.

Already racing against time to seal his Olympic berth, Kashyap was back on the court at German Open after recovering from a series of injuries which derailed his preparation for the Summer Games.

However, the Commonwealth Games champion suffered a knee injury during his clash against eighth seed Son Wan Ho of Korea last night and had to retire midway with the score reading 12-21, 11-16 at the RWE-Sporthalle here.

Kashyap is being attended by physiotherapist Dr. Johnson Solomon but the extent of his injury is still not clear.

“He is fine now but we are waiting for some tests. Only after that, we can say how much time would be needed for him to recover,” Johnson said.

Meanwhile, World No. 10 Kidambi Srikanth, seeded sixth, also bowed out of the men’s singles event after losing 21-18, 18-21, 18-21 to 12th seed NG Ka Long Angus of Hong Kong in another pre-quarterfinals match.

Once the world No.8, Kashyap has now slipped to 17th, owing to a series of injuries which started with the calf muscle tear in October last year. He played in the Syed Modi Grand Prix Gold but could not defend the title, bowing out in the quarterfinals after sustaining an abdominal strain.

The Hyderabad lad was named in the team for the South Asian Games which was held in Guwahati and Shillong early last month but after repeated requests to BAI and SAI, he was excused from the team at the last moment.

The 29-year-old had also skipped the Badminton Asia Team Championship to regain his fitness so that he can take a shot at Olympic qualification by fetching crucial points to reach the World top-16 before the May 1 cut off date.

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