Sindhu seizes semifinal spot at Macau Open

World No. 12 Sindhu surpassed Chen 21-13, 18-21, 21-14 in a quarterfinal match that lasted 54 minutes, to emerge as the lone Indian survivor, after men’s singles players B. Sai Praneeth and H. S. Prannoy bowed out.

Published : Nov 27, 2015 17:09 IST , Macau

The two-time World Championship bronze-medallist Sindhu, will next square off against the winner of the match between Japan’s Sayaka Sato and Japan’s Akane Yamaguchi.
The two-time World Championship bronze-medallist Sindhu, will next square off against the winner of the match between Japan’s Sayaka Sato and Japan’s Akane Yamaguchi.
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The two-time World Championship bronze-medallist Sindhu, will next square off against the winner of the match between Japan’s Sayaka Sato and Japan’s Akane Yamaguchi.

Two-time defending champion P. V. Sindhu remained on course for retaining her women’s singles title as she reached the semifinals with a hard-fought three-game win over China’s Chen Yufei at the USD 120,000 Macau Open Grand Prix Gold here today.

World No. 12 Sindhu surpassed Chen 21-13, 18-21, 21-14 in a quarterfinal match that lasted 54 minutes, to emerge as the lone Indian survivor, after men’s singles players B. Sai Praneeth and H. S. Prannoy bowed out.

The two-time World Championship bronze-medallist Sindhu, will next square off against the winner of the match between Japan’s Sayaka Sato and Japan’s Akane Yamaguchi.

It was a disappointing day for Praneeth and Prannoy as their fight ended with losses against Malaysia’s Goh Soon Huat and Indonesia’s Ihsan Maulana Mustofa respectively.

Praneeth, seeded 15th, fought for an hour and 10 minutes before losing 16-21, 23-21, 13-21 to Goh Soon Huat, while seventh seed Prannoy squandered a first-game advantage to go down narrowly 21-18, 19-21, 11-21 in 59 minutes.

In women’s singles, Sindhu stamped her authority early in the match as she zoomed to a 8-1 lead. However, Chen narrowed it down to 7-8 but the Indian was alert enough to soon distance herself from the Chinese, eventually pocketing the first game with a four-point burst.

In the second game, Chen showed her prowess as she opened up a narrow 5-2 lead and entered the break with a 11-7 advantage. The Chinese continued to march ahead after the interval and staved off the challenge from Sindhu, who kept breathing down her neck for most part of the game, to roar back into the contest.

In the decider, fifth seed Sindhu changed gears and didn’t allow Chen to come near her as she lead 7-3 initially and kept moving ahead to eventually close the issue without much ado.

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