P.V. Sindhu had never lost to Gregoria Marsika in their four previous meetings but the GBK Istora Stadium does strange things to the Indonesian. The World No. 22 gets pumped up by the noisy home fans who pack the stadium and this has seen her slay two top 10 seeds over the last few days at the Asiad here, including Japan’s World No. 2 Akane Yamaguchi.
And despite leading 7-0 in the opening game and 6-2 in the next, World No. 3 Sindhu had to spend a few anxious moments before overcoming Marsika 21-12, 21-15 and enter the women’s singles quarterfinals.
Earlier, Saina Nehwal made the last eight with a 21-6, 21-14 victory over another Indonesian, Fitriani Fitriani. After K. Srikanth and H.S. Prannoy crashed out in the opening round on Friday, the women’s performance brought a huge sigh of relief.
Marsika is a very deceptive player and she tried to tire out Sindhu by forcing her to lunge frequently. That strategy appeared to work well as recovered from 0-7 to 8-10 in the opening game.
Sindhu then realised at this stage that she had to keep the crowd as quiet as possible and for this she had to tied her opponent down. She did that with a few hard smashes and won the game. The second game almost went on similar lines and Sindhu came out successful in the end.
“After I took a 7-0 lead, I was continuously giving her points but I wouldn’t say I was nervous,” said Sindhu.
“This is one of the best crowds for badminton in the world and I knew it would be behind her, backing her loudly, but I kept going the way I normally do.”
Commonwealth Games silver medallists Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty, however, couldn’t cross the second round after their gallant fight ended with a 17-21 21-19 17-21 against Korea’s Choi Solgyu and Min Hyuk Kang in men’s doubles.