Indian badminton star Saina Nehwal crushed out of Olympics semifinal as she went down to world champion Wang Yihan in the women's singles badminton event in London on Friday. The match lasted 42 min; the longest rally was 34 strokes.
Saina, the first Indian shuttler to reach the Olympics semi-finals, lost 13-21, 13-21 at the Wembley Arena. The fourth seed will now play for the bronze medal Saturday against the other losing semi-finalist.
In their previous five encounters, Saina had never been able to blow Wang away. The two last met in January this year at the Malaysian Open where Saina lost 15-21, 16-21. In two of the three encounters in 2011, Saina managed to stretch Wang to three sets but could never alter the end result.
With already 21 individual titles to her name, Wang is known in the badminton circuit for not giving an inch to her opponents. Nehwal has yet to figure how to unravel that particular riddle. Saina was realistic about her chances in the semis without sounding overtly confident.
"It's very, very difficult as the Chinese are strong opponents. We will both be under the pressure of expectations but I am not thinking about all that."
You can still shoot for bronze Saina. Give your best!
Saina Nehwal loses in Olympics semis-final; still in competition for bronze!
on August 03 at 04:05pm
Indian badminton star Saina Nehwal crushed out of Olympics semifinal as she went down to world champion Wang Yihan in the women's singles badminton event in London on Friday. The match lasted 42 min; the longest rally was 34 strokes.
Saina, the first Indian shuttler to reach the Olympics semi-finals, lost 13-21, 13-21 at the Wembley Arena. The fourth seed will now play for the bronze medal Saturday against the other losing semi-finalist.
In their previous five encounters, Saina had never been able to blow Wang away. The two last met in January this year at the Malaysian Open where Saina lost 15-21, 16-21. In two of the three encounters in 2011, Saina managed to stretch Wang to three sets but could never alter the end result.
With already 21 individual titles to her name, Wang is known in the badminton circuit for not giving an inch to her opponents. Nehwal has yet to figure how to unravel that particular riddle. Saina was realistic about her chances in the semis without sounding overtly confident.
"It's very, very difficult as the Chinese are strong opponents. We will both be under the pressure of expectations but I am not thinking about all that."
You can still shoot for bronze Saina. Give your best!
Saina, the first Indian shuttler to reach the Olympics semi-finals, lost 13-21, 13-21 at the Wembley Arena. The fourth seed will now play for the bronze medal Saturday against the other losing semi-finalist.
In their previous five encounters, Saina had never been able to blow Wang away. The two last met in January this year at the Malaysian Open where Saina lost 15-21, 16-21. In two of the three encounters in 2011, Saina managed to stretch Wang to three sets but could never alter the end result.
With already 21 individual titles to her name, Wang is known in the badminton circuit for not giving an inch to her opponents. Nehwal has yet to figure how to unravel that particular riddle. Saina was realistic about her chances in the semis without sounding overtly confident.
"It's very, very difficult as the Chinese are strong opponents. We will both be under the pressure of expectations but I am not thinking about all that."
You can still shoot for bronze Saina. Give your best!
Source: TNN