Sathiyan settles for bronze at Oman Open
Archana Kamath picked up a maiden U-21 silver after losing to top-seeded Satsuki Odo in the women's singles final.
Published : Mar 24, 2019 17:41 IST
G. Sathiyan could not overcome a tough Mattias Flack of Sweden in the men's singles semifinals of the ITTF Challenge Plus Oman Open in Muscat on Sunday. The fourth-seeded Indian lost 8-11, 11-7, 9-11, 11-9, 9-11, 11-9, 10-12 and settled for the bronze medal.
The top-seeded Swede and the Indian had the measure of each other with the two winning alternate games to take the issue to the decider, where the Swede had the slight advantage until deuce. But once he broke Sathiyan to go up, it was all over for the Indian as his opponent wrapped it up with the winner.
The only Indian to survive so far, Sathiyan got past Frenchman Emmanuel Lebesson in the quarterfinals 4-1 (11-9, 11-7, 11-9, 6-11, 12-10) after having dominated the first three games. While the seventh seeded Frenchman showed intentions of coming back, Sathiyan arrested any such possibility winning the fifth game.
Earlier, in the round-of-16, Sathiyan beat Anthony Amalraj 4-1. Another Indian to go down in the round-of-16 was Sharath Kamal, who lost 1-4 to Croat Pucar Tamislov.
It was disappointing for India in women singles as both Madhurika Patkar and Riti Shankar failed to go past the first round of the main draw.
In men's doubles, Sathiyan and Sharath lost their quarterfinals to the Russian pair of Denis Ivonin and Vladimir Sidorenko 2-3 and so did Archana and Sathiyan in mixed doubles first round. However, the other pair of Madhurika Patkar and Harmeet Desai bowed out in the quarters.
Archana bags silver
Archana Kamath’s excellent run at the ITTF Challenge Oman Open came to an end when she lost the Under-21 women's singles final in straight games to top-seeded Japanese Satsuki Odo on Saturday evening.
The Indian had to settle for the silver in her first major outing since winning the national women singles crown at Cuttack this January.
The Japanese used her potent backhand to greater effect to beat the Indian 7-11, 8-11, 6-11. But the win was not easy for the Japanese who admitted that Archana was very good, using both her backhand and forehand.
“It was a very difficult match,” said the top-seed. Archana had her chances in the fist two games but a couple of mistakes did her in.
“She (Satsuki) was really good, especially on her backhand. But I think I had a good outing here at Muscat,” said the reigning national champion.
In fact, on her way to the finals, the Indian defeated No. 3 seed Maria Tailakova of Russia in a tough five-gave semifinals, after trailing 0-2. The Indian bounced back nicely to win 6-11, 5-11, 11-2, 11-6, 11-9. In the quarters she had beaten Singapore’s Rui Xuan Goi 11-7, 11-5, 11-8 after downing Russian Valeria Shcherbatykh in straight games.
Manav Thakkar bowed out in the semifinals when he went down Artur Abusev of Russia 4-11, 6-11, 5-1. Earlier, he had beaten compatriot Jeet Chandra 3-1 in the quarterfinals.