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Asian Games 2018: Sindhu first Indian shuttler to enter final

August 27, 2018 01:32 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 08:23 am IST - Jakarta

Sindhu will now fight it out with Tzu Ying to win India’s first ever individual gold in badminton.

P.V. Sindhu plays a shot against Japan's Akane Yamaguchi in the women's singles 2nd semifinal match at the 18th Asian Games in Jakarta, Indonesia on Monday, Aug 27, 2018.

She started her Asian Games singles journey very shakily a few days ago but now P.V. Sindhu is just a step away from gold and glory.

She is already assured of a place in Indian badminton history, becoming the first Indian to enter an Asiad final here on Monday and the two-time World Championship silver medallist will meet Taipei’s World No. 1 Tai Tzu Ying in the women’s final on Tuesday.

If she wins, it will be the first-ever Asiad singles gold in any racket sport for an Indian woman.

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Sindhu, the World No. 3, overcame a mid-match lapse of concentration to defeat Japan’s Akane Yamaguchi 21-17, 15-21, 21-10 while Saina Nehwal was left confused by Tai Tzu’s end-game strategy and lost 17-21, 14-21 in the semifinals.

 

Indonesian Jonathan Christie and Taipei’s Chou Tienchen will clash in the men’s final. Christie, inspired by the huge home crowd, defeated Japan’s Kenta Nishimoto 21-15, 15-21, 21-19 while Tienchen prevented an all-Indonesia final by packing off Anthony Ginting 21-16, 21-23, 21-17.

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Saina, who recharged badminton in India with her 2012 Olympics bronze, ended her campaign with a bronze, her first in three attempts in singles at these Games.

Confident start

Sindhu has won four of her five encounters against Yamaguchi this year and with that assuring thought, she began confidently. The 23-year-old’s tall frame and long limbs gave her a huge advantage, her smashes which came from a steep angle often rattled her opponent and she could handle anything which Yamaguchi could throw at her.

But Yamaguchi, despite being short and a bit stocky, is a great retriever and has an impressive jump smash. Though Sindhu moved to 15-10 in the opener, she cut down the gap to 15-17 before buckling under the Indian’s onslaught.

The second game was close initially but Yamaguchi broke away to 17-13 using her deceptive round the head shots effectively. She also enjoyed three lucky net cord points and took the game to the decider which Sindhu won comfortably.

“I know I started the Asiad very shakily but I kept getting better with every match. I always believed in my ability,” said Sindhu.

The Saina-Tai Tzu semifinal was close in patches but the Taipei star could suddenly break away to big leads at crucial stages, like 19-15 in the first game and 19-14 in the next.

Saina admitted that Tai Tzu’s finishing strategy left her confused.

“She tries to be very quick in the last few points. I could have controlled somewhere here and there but I think it’s tough to play her because she has a complete game where you don’t know where to play her and where to get the points,” said Saina.

“I think I was really confused there.”

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