Sindhu bows out of World Cโships
Two-time Olympic medallist PV Sindhu’s quest for a sixth BWF World Championships medal ended on Friday after losing a hard-fought three-game quarterfinal thriller to Indonesia’s Putri Kusuma Wardani. Sindhu, the 2019 world champion and five-time medallist at the event, was eyeing a record sixth podium finish, but faltered at the finishing line, losing 14-21 21-13 16-21 to ninth seed Wardani in a pulsating 64-minute contest.
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Earlier in the day, the Indian mixed doubles pair of Dhruv Kapila and Tanisha Crasto bowed out after losing 15-21 13-21 to world No. 4 Malaysians Chen Tang Jie and Toh Ee Wei, ending Indiaโs hopes of a maiden mixed doubles medal at the showpiece.
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Wardani was the sharper player in the opening game, using angles and smashes to put Sindhu under pressure. After the score was tied at 3-3, a flurry of errors from the Indian allowed the Indonesian to seize control, moving into the mid-game break 11-7. Wardani extended her dominance to 18-9 as Sindhu repeatedly went wide and long, before pocketing the opener 21-14 when the Indian pushed one out with a broken string.
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Sindhu came back strong in the second game, tightening her net play and finding her range on the smashes. From 4-2 up, she stormed to a 16-6 lead as Wardaniโs game unravelled. Sindhu closed the game 21-13 with a booming cross-court winner, drawing level in style.
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In the decider, Sindhu fell 0-3 behind before unleashing relentless, aggressive returns to finally crack Wardaniโs defence. The Indonesian went long, making it 3-3. Wardani managed to defend stubbornly, but at 5-4 she wilted under Sindhuโs pressure. A gripping 59-shot rally followed with Wardani blunting everything thrown at her until she finally netted to hand the point to Sindhu.
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Sindhu then produced a deceptive push over Wardaniโs head, only for the 23-year-old to hit back with a smash and level at 7-7. Momentum swung back and forth as a tight net exchange drew an error from Sindhu before she recovered at 8-8 with a dogged defensive stand, and sealed the rally with a brilliant cross-court smash.
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Wardani lobbed cleverly to equalise at 9-9, and then took control. Sindhu was called for a foul when her racquet crossed the net during a duel, and Wardani followed up with a sharp front-court winner to go into the interval two points up. Resuming from the same end where she had won the second game, Sindhu struck first with a spinning net shot. But Wardani responded with perfect placement, and after Sindhu sent one into the net, the Indonesian stretched her lead to 15-11.
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Sindhu kept fighting, narrowing it to 15-16 with a wide smash from Wardani and another fine net shot. But just as she closed in, Wardani landed a body smash, though she immediately cancelled it out with a net error โ 17-16. The Indonesian then struck a precise smash deep to Sindhuโs forehand, followed by a costly misjudgement from the Indian at the backline, which established a three-point cushion for Wardani. When Sindhu netted, Wardani brought up four match points. Sindhu went wide again to draw curtains on the match.