India Open | Srikanth-Yew could face in semifinals

Easy passage expected for Sindhu and the duo of Satwik-Shetty

December 23, 2021 05:32 pm | Updated 10:00 pm IST - New Delhi

Indian badminton player Srikanth Kidambi, who won the silver medal at the BWF World Championships, after losing to Singapore's Loh Kean Yew. File

Indian badminton player Srikanth Kidambi, who won the silver medal at the BWF World Championships, after losing to Singapore's Loh Kean Yew. File

A repeat clash of the recent World championship final is in the offing after top seed K. Srikanth and World champion Loh Kean Yew found themselves in the same half of the men’s singles draw in the $400,000 India Open badminton beginning here on Jan. 11.

The two are slated to meet in the semifinals should Srikanth get past sixth seed Sameer Verma and fifth-seeded Singaporean upstage fourth-seeded Thai Kantaphone Wagcharoen.

The men’s draw is also likely to see a clash between World championship bronze-medallist Lakshya Sen and quarterfinalist H.S. Prannoy, seeded eighth and three, in the quarterfinals.

Second seed B. Sai Praneeth could play Ajay Jayaram on the way, while P. Kashyap will have to beat back the challenge of seventh seed Tommy Sugiarto for quarterfinal berth.

No serious challenge

In the women’s singles, P.V. Sindhu should have no serious challenge on her way to the final. Fifth seed Evegeniya Kosetskaya is in the same quarter as Sindhu. From the next quarter, Sindhu is likely to face either third seed Yeo Jia Min (Singapore) or sixth seed Supanida Katethong (Thailand).

From the bottom half of the draw, fourth seed Saina Nehwal could face Malvika Bansod in the second round, and Iris Wang (USA) in the quarterfinals. Should the seedings hold in the last quarter of the draw, Saina could play second seed Busanan Ongbamrunghphan (Thailand) for a place in the final.

In men’s doubles, second seed Chirag Shetty and Satwiksairaj Rankireddy appear to have an easy route to the final against the firm favourite, three-time World champion Mohammad Ahsan and Hendra Setiawan (Indonesia).

The women’s doubles, where only eight out of 32 pairs are non-Indians, second seed Ashwini Ponnappa and Sikki Reddy only have Russian third seed Anastasiia Akchurina and Olga Morozova to worry about on their way to the prospective title-clash against top seed Jongkolphan Kititharakul and Rawinda Prajongjai (Thailand).

In mixed doubles, 23 Indian pairs in the field of 32 do not offer much hope.

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