Sandhu, Ghosal, Tandon advance to quarters

Former national champion Harinder Pal Singh Sandhu entered the quarterfinals of the main draw by shocking Malaysian seventh seed Ivan Yuen in four games in the $50,000 CCI International JSW Indian Squash Circuit 2017 on Tuesday.

Published : Nov 08, 2017 01:35 IST , Mumbai

Sandhu, who came through two rounds of the qualifiers in the PSA event to enter the main draw, showed greater application and skill to topple his higher ranked Malaysian rival 4-11, 11-6, 11-2, 11-2 in 51 minutes at the Cricket Club of India.
Sandhu, who came through two rounds of the qualifiers in the PSA event to enter the main draw, showed greater application and skill to topple his higher ranked Malaysian rival 4-11, 11-6, 11-2, 11-2 in 51 minutes at the Cricket Club of India.
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Sandhu, who came through two rounds of the qualifiers in the PSA event to enter the main draw, showed greater application and skill to topple his higher ranked Malaysian rival 4-11, 11-6, 11-2, 11-2 in 51 minutes at the Cricket Club of India.

Former national champion Harinder Pal Singh Sandhu entered the quarterfinals of the main draw by shocking Malaysian seventh seed Ivan Yuen in four games in the $50,000 CCI International JSW Indian Squash Circuit 2017 on Tuesday.

Sandhu, who came through two rounds of the qualifiers in the PSA event to enter the main draw, showed greater application and skill to topple his higher ranked Malaysian rival 4-11, 11-6, 11-2, 11-2 in 51 minutes at the Cricket Club of India. In another surprise, wild card Ramit Tandon of India shunted out the No. 8 seed Abdulla Mohd al Tamimi of Qatar 11-7, 4-11, 11-4, 11-3 in 45 minutes to join compatriot Sandhu in the quarters.

READ: Harinder Pal wins South Australian Open title

India’s main hope, third seed Saurav Ghosal, hardly broke a sweat as he outclassed English qualifier Joshua Masters to make it a triple delight for the Indian fans. Ghosal, ranked 21st in the PSA circuit, simply outclassed Masters 11-4, 11-2, 11-3 with a flurry of brilliant shots that brooked no answer from his bewildered rival to enter the quarters.

Sandhu, ranked 69 in the world, took time to settle down against his 46—ranked Malaysian rival to drop the opening game.

But he took control of the match from there on by running up big leads early in each of the next three games. He led 6—1 in all these games and did not allow Yuen to fight his way back.

In fact the Malaysian, who was penalized on quite a few occasions for coming in the Indian’s way, seemed to throw in the towel once the lead became too big in all the games.

Sandhu hit fluently on both flanks, was the faster of the two and took the ball early. He also played some excellent drop shots to fox his rival.

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