Staying grounded after top flights at court

The 22-year-old star shuttler says she wants to win more this year

February 18, 2018 10:19 pm | Updated 10:19 pm IST

Badminton player P.V. Sindhu in conversation with journalist Prem Panicker.

Badminton player P.V. Sindhu in conversation with journalist Prem Panicker.

Nothing in Indian badminton’s recent history has quite had a nation on tenterhooks as two of P.V. Sindhu’s matches over the past 18 months. The first was her final at the Olympics in Rio, where she lost to Carolina Marin of Spain. The second was her gruelling, marathon battle with Nozomi Okuhara of Japan for the World Championship in Glasgow. The first catapulted her to stardom; the second only reinforced her status as one of India’s finest athletes.

In the year between the two events, Ms. Sindhu evolved greatly as a player. “I had to work on each and every stroke after Rio,” she told journalist Prem Panicker at The Huddle here on Sunday.

“I kept on learning. Strategy plays a very important role. Carolina is an aggressive player; Okuhara is a rally player. Women’s badminton has changed a lot. Now games are extending to an hour-and-a-half or two hours; endurance is very important.”

Last year was a good one for Ms. Sindhu — two Super Series titles and a World Championship silver, not to forget her reaching two other major finals — but she has her sights set on a lot more in 2018. “There is a lot to do this year. I want to win more — there is the Commonwealth Games, the Asian Games, the Worlds and the All England Championships. I’m aiming higher,” she said.

There has been much opposition to the Badminton World Federation’s freshly introduced regulations, which make it mandatory for the top 15 players to play a minimum of 12 tournaments on the new World Tour, but Ms. Sindhu was not particularly concerned.

“After the calendar is out, you can’t do anything about it,” she said. “You should know which tournaments to play and which not to; you have to discuss that with your coach and decide for yourself.”

Managing time

Given her unforgiving calendar [she trains seven hours a day, and then there are the tournaments], did Ms. Sindhu find time for a personal life, Mr. Panicker wondered. She was, he reminded the gathering, still only 22.

“I don’t take it as a burden. Age is not a matter to think about. I don’t feel I’m only 22 because if you think that and think there’s a long way to go, you never know where you will be,” she said.

Life had changed immeasurably after the Olympics, Ms. Sindhu admitted. “I’m very happy; after the Olympics my life has changed a lot. Having this fan following, this limelight, I’m really enjoying it. My father has always told me one thing: no matter how high you go, you always have to be grounded. I really follow that. Even when you’re on top of the world, you should remember where you’ve come from.”

She had not forgotten the sacrifices of her parents, she said. “My mother had to retire from the Railways. My parents have sacrificed a lot more than I have. Some of their colleagues and neighbours felt I would succeed at neither badminton nor academics. But my parents believed in me.”

It is worth considering that Ms. Sindhu’s best could yet lie ahead of her. “It’s not that I won a medal at the Olympics and I am done. There are many more medals I have to get,” she said.

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