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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

All England Badminton: Gayatri Gopichand, Treesa Jolly enter last-eight

Treesa and Gayatri continue their rise as they shock former world No. 1 pair of Yuki Fukushima and Sayaka Hirota 21-14, 24-22

PTI Birmingham Published 17.03.23, 06:12 AM
A file picture of India’s badminton doubles pair of Gayatri Gopichand (left) and Treesa Jolly.

A file picture of India’s badminton doubles pair of Gayatri Gopichand (left) and Treesa Jolly. Twitter

Indian women’s doubles pair of Treesa Jolly and Gayatri Gopichand scripted a stunning win to progress to the quarter finals but Lakshya Sen bowed out in the men’s singles competition of the All England Championships here on Thursday.

Commonwealth Games bronze medallists Treesa and Gayatri continued their rise as they shocked former world No. 1 pair of Yuki Fukushima and Sayaka Hirota 21-14, 24-22.

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The world No. 17 Indian pair, who had reached the semi-finals of the last edition, will next face Chinese combination of Li Wen Mei and Liu Xuan Xuan.

Last year’s finalist Sen, however, couldn’t find his touch against Anders Antonsen, going down 13-21, 15-21 in 52 minutes. It was a sweet revenge from the Danish, who had gone down in straight games to the Indian in 2022.

Returning from an injury, Satwiksairaj Rankireddy paired up with his partner Chirag Shetty but their gallant fight ended with a 21-10, 17-21, 19-21 loss to China’s world No. 10 Liang Wei Keng and Wang Chang.

Treesa and Gayatri have been in good form, having claimed a win over world No. 7 Tan Pearly and Thinnah Muralitharan at the Badminton Asia Mixed Team Championship in February. In their opening round here, the Indian duo upset seventh seeds Jongkolphan Kitiiharakul and Rawinda Prajongai of Thailand.

In the men’s singles match, Sen and Antonsen engaged in some high-quality rallies with the latter taking an 8-4 lead and then grabbing a three-point cushion at the break.

But Sen soon started to move well and levelled at 11-11 after winning a 52-shot rally but couldn’t continue the momentum. Antonsen pulled away to 19-13 after unleashing a winner on his opponent’s forehand to win another exciting rally.

A couple of errors from Sen and Antonsen held the bragging right in the battle between the two former top-10 players.

After the change of sides, Sen stepped up his game and worked his way to a 9-4 and then an 11-5 advantage at the mid-game interval. Antonsen then scripted a fightback to move within one point of the Indian at 10-11.

Sen lost his way after that as Antonsen started dictating the terms to turn the tables at 14-13. Sen missed a few shots as the Dane grabbed five match points and sealed it on the first chance.

The second-round exit means Sen will lose a lot of his ranking points and slip further in the BWF chart. The former world No. 6 had lost in the first round at German Open to slip to 19th in the rankings last Tuesday.

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