Saina Nehwal, PV Sindhu Enter Quarters at World Badminton Championship
Saina Nehwal beat 13th seed Sayaka Takahashi of Japan 14-21, 21-18, 21-12 to reach the quarterfinals of the World Badminton Championship being played in Copenhagen.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: August 28, 2014 10:58 PM IST
Indian shuttlers Saina Nehwal and PV Sindhu came back from a game down to win their respective women's singles matches as they entered the quarterfinals of the World Badminton Championship, here on Thursday.
Sindhu, 19, held her nerves in the last six match points to upset World No.5 Yeon Ju Bae of South Korea 19-21 22-20 25-23 in 1 hour and 16 minutes at the Ballerup Super Arena.
The 11th-seeded Hyderabadi will now take on World No.2 Shixian Wang of China, who eased past Thi Trang Vu of Vietnam 21-12 21-7 in the pre-quarterfinals match.
Earlier Olympic bronze medallist Nehwal fought her way back from a game down to register a 14-21 21-18 21-12 victory over Sayaka Takahashi of Japan.
World No.7 Saina, seeded seventh in the tournament, lost the first game, but rallied in a fine fashion to prevail over her 13th seeded Japanese rival in a match that lasted an hour and five minutes.
Saina will take on World No.1 Li Xuerui of China in the last-eight stage of the tournament.
In the opening game today, the Indian looked completely off-colour and was never in contention. From the very beginning she started to trail behind and there was not even one instance in the game when Saina could catch her opponent.
The World No. 14 Japanese straight away opened up a 4-0 lead and throughout the game, Saina was lagging behind. The nearest she could reach her rival was at 5-6.
In the second game, the Indian got her act together and surged ahead with a 7-3 lead, but Takahashi soon earned four consecutive points to make it 7-7 and then moved swiftly to extend the gap.
At one stage the Japanese had opened up a huge 13-8 lead and the Indian was seen playing only the catch-up game.
But just when it was looking as if it was all over for Saina, she maintained her clam to brought the gap down to 15-16 before catching Takahashi at 17-17.
At 18-18, Saina upped the ante and reeled off three straight points to take the match to the decider.
The third and final game turned out to be a cake walk for India's ace shuttler, who broke away from a tied 7-7 situation to topple her rival 21-12 at the end.