Marin makes history with third world title

Opponent Carolina Marin became the first woman shuttler to win the world championships thrice.

August 05, 2018 02:54 pm | Updated 09:32 pm IST

Spain's Carolina Marin poses with her medal on the podium after defeating P.V. Sindhu in the World Badminton Championship women's singles final in Nanjing on August 5, 2018.

Spain's Carolina Marin poses with her medal on the podium after defeating P.V. Sindhu in the World Badminton Championship women's singles final in Nanjing on August 5, 2018.

Carolina Marin claimed a slice of history as the Spaniard became the first woman to win three badminton World titles with an emphatic victory over P.V. Sindhu of India on Sunday.

The aggressive Marin is now the reigning World and Olympic champion thanks to an imperious 21-19, 21-10 win in Nanjing.

The all-action 25-year-old adds the 2018 crown to her titles in 2014 and 2015, and the Olympic gold she won from the unlucky Sindhu at Rio 2016.

In the first game, the rivals went toe-to-toe, the more attacking Marin, the seventh seed, bellowing after each winning point. Third seed Sindhu, 23, well known for her never-say-die spirit, initially edged ahead before Marin dragged her back to 16-16.

It was too close to call and the chair umpire had a job on his hands as the two foes repeatedly tried to throw one another off on Marin’s serve — the Spaniard wanting to get on with the game quickly but Sindhu refusing to let her in an attempt to kill the momentum.

Sindhu hit into the net to allow Marin to capture the first game in 27 minutes and she took that momentum into the second to make history.

As well as disappointment at Rio 2016, Sindhu was beaten in last year’s World Championships final by Japan’s Nozomi Okuhara and had to settle for silver at this year’s Commonwealth Games too.

First Japanese

Meanwhile, Kento Momota became the first Japanese man to win the badminton World Championships on Sunday, putting behind him a gambling scandal that threatened to ruin his career. 

The explosive 23-year-old convincingly defeated China’s highly promising Shi Yuqi 21-11, 21-13.

Momota’s nascent career descended into controversy in 2016 when Japanese badminton chiefs suspended him for more than a year for visiting an illegal casino, denying him a place at the Rio Olympics.

Momota, No. 2 in the world at the time, has been working his way back to the top ever since and the No. 7 is currently in the form of his life.

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