BATC: Indian women create history, reach final for the first

[Representational Photo : iStock]


Riding on the awesome display by young shuttlers, Indian women’s team stunned top seed Japan 3-2 to storm into their first-ever final of the Badminton Asia Team Championships at Selangor, Malaysia, on Saturday.

For once PV Sindhu took the back seat as young stars showed nerves of steel to oust the mighty Japanese. The Indian girls showed no sign of nervousness even after their main star and twice Olympic medalist lost her opening march.

India who had earlier surprised the formidable Chines in the group stage once again showed that they are not intimidated by any opponent or any situation as the young guns punched above their weight in the semifinals.

Having reached the last four srage ,the Indians needed a strong start from Sindhu but things did not go according to plan.

Sindhu began strong against Aya Ohori but a dip in concentration helped the Japanese take the opening game.

The Indian lost nine straight points at the start of the second game till she herself stitched together a run of nine points to draw level 10-19 to 19-19. She did manage to save a match point but could not sustain the momentum and lost 21-13, 22-20.

The young combination of Treesa Jolly and Gayatri Gopichand then had an uphill task of upsetting world no. 6 pairing of Nami Matsuyama and Chiharu Shida to keep the team in the hunt and they delivered in what was the third meeting between the two pairs.

Treesa and Gayatri began by winning the opening game but the experience of the Japanese found a way to force the decider. They found their footing once again in the decider and opened up a 19-13 lead before they were again put under pressure by their more experienced opponents.

To their credit, the young Indian pair did not lose heart despite the scores being levelled at 19-19 and then converted their second match point to win 21-17, 16-21, 22-20.

Ashmita Chaliha then rose to the occasion and was at her aggressive best to beat former world champion Nozomi Okuhara 21-17, 21-14 to put the Indians ahead.

Sindhu, who was also shouldering the responsibility of playing the second doubles, teamed up with Ashwini Ponnappa but the pair went down 14-21, 11-21 against world no. 11 combination of Rena Miyaura and Ayako Sakuramoto.

This meant that national champion Anmol Kharab needed to once again shoulder the responsibility of seeing her team through and the 17-year-old came out with flying colours.

Playing in her first major senior event, the world no 472 hardly showed any nerves and dominated the proceedings for most part of her 52-minute clash against Natsuki Nidaira, ranked no 29 in the world, to win 21-14, 21-18 and seal the victory.

In the final, India will face Thailand, who defeated Indonesia 3-1 in the other semi-final.

This is a proud moment for the Indian Badminton. They youngsters have justified the selection with their awesome performances.They have done the country proud” opined BAI secretary general Sanjay Mishra.

Result (semifinal):

Women: India lost to Japan 1-3 (PV Sindhu lost to Aya Ohori 13-21, 20-22; Treesa Jolly/Gayatri Gopichand bt Nami Matsuyama/Chiharu Shida 21-17, 16-21; 22-20; Ashmita Chaliha bt Nozomi Okuhara 21-17, 21-14; Sindhu/Ashwini Ponnappa lost to Rena Miyaura/Ayako Sakuramoto 14-21, 11-21; Anmol Kharab bt Natsuki Nidaira 21-14.