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All England Championships: Sindhu, Prannoy Knocked Out in Round 1

Sindhu lost 16-21, 22-20, 18-21 to Ji Hyun of South Korea in the first round of the All England Open Championships.

Updated
Badminton
3 min read
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Snapshot
  • Indian shuttler PV Sindhu was knocked out of the All England Open Badminton Championships in the opening round on 6 March.
  • In the men’s singles event, HS Prannoy and Sameer Verma lost their respective campaign openers.
  • Saina Nehwal, Kidambi Srikanth and B Sai Praneeth entered the second round after winning their respective matches.

Indian shuttler PV Sindhu was knocked out in the opening round of the All England Open Badminton Championships by Sung Ji Hyun of Korea in the women's singles event on Wednesday, 6 March. In men's singles, 2017 Singapore Open champion B Sai Praneeth defeated compatriot HS Prannoy 21-19, 21-19 in Birmingham.

Among the other Indians participating, Saina Nehwal defeated Kirsty Gilmour 21-17, 21-18 while Kidambi Srikanth won 21-13, 21-11 against Brice Leverdez to enter the second round. Sameer Verma went down 16-21, 21-18, 21-14 against sixth-seed Viktor Axelsen of Denmark.

Fifth-seeded Sindhu, who was beaten by Sung Ji twice in last three meetings, lost 16-21, 22-20, 18-21, despite saving as many as eight match points in the second and third game.

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Sindhu went into the opener with an overall record of a 8-6 against Sung Ji but the Korean once again troubled the Indian in the 81-minute thrilling clash which went down to the wire.

Sindhu showed grit in the closing moments of the second and third game but also committed too many unforced errors during the match.

The Indian saved three match points at 17-20 in the second game to take the match to the decider, during which she saved five match points before suffering her fourth first-round loss at the USD 1 million event.

Sung Ji will face Hong Kong's Cheung Ngan Yi in the second round.

The women's doubles pair of Meghana Jakkampudi and Poorvisha S Ram fought hard before losing 21-18 12-21 12-21 to the Russian combination of Ekaterina Bolotova and Alina Daveltova.

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Sindhu Goes Down After Thrilling Contest

The opening clash between Sindhu and Sung Ji turned out to be a thrilling contest.

Sindhu enjoyed a 6-3 lead early on but Sung Ji drew level, helped by Sindhu's poor judgement.

The Korean kept up the attack and entered the first interval with a lead of 11-8 after the Indian hit the net.

Sindhu dominated the rallies after the breather and drew parity at 11-11 with a cross-court smash.

However, the Indian struggled with her timing and committed too many unforced errors to allow the Korean a cushion of 16-14.

Sung Ji continued to gather points and clinched four game points. The Korean sealed it without much fuss when Sindhu struck out again.

After the change of sides, Sindhu found the going tough with Sung Ji grabbing a 11-8 advantage at the break. After the breather, Sindhu managed to make it 13-13 with some precise returns.

Sindhu tried to put pressure on her rival in the rallies but Sung Ji remained determined and led 18-14. She continued to struggle with her strokes and buried two of her returns into the net, giving Sung Ji a lead of 18-14.

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Sindhu narrowed the deficit to 17-18 before sending another cross-court smash wide. Sung Ji grabbed three match points after that.

However, the Indian produced a razor sharp cross court return and engaged her rival in the longest rally of the match to save three points.

Sung Ji hit the net to give a game point to the Indian, who sealed it with a body smash to roar back into the contest.

In the decider, the duo engaged in some good rallies but Sung Ji again had a two-point advantage at the interval after reeling off four straight points.

The Korean kept pushing forward, moving to a 15-9 lead at one stage.

A wide shot broke her run of points but Sindhu committed a service error and followed it up with two more unforced errors to allow Sung Ji to lead 18-10.

Sung Ji soon grabbed as many as seven match points with a superb return near the net. Sindhu did save five of them but it just wasn't enough.

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