Saina knocks down world No.6 to storm into badminton quarters

By IANS,

Beijing : India’s Saina Nehwal pulled off a nerve-wracking thriller to stun world no.6 and fourth seed Chen Wang of Hong Kong to storm into the quarterfinals of women’s singles badminton competition at the Beijing Olympics here Monday.


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An hour after rifle-man Abhinav Bindra created history, bringing home India’s first individual gold medal, the world No.15 Saina shocked Wang 21-19, 11-21, 21-11 in the pre-quarters at the Beijing University of Technology Gymnasium.

Eighteen-year-old Saina showed nerves of steel to stave off the fierce challenge of experienced Wang, who had a 2-0 record over the Indian.

Saina, who has grown up dreaming of an Olympic medal, fought like a champion and showed maturity beyond her age in knocking down the higher ranked Wang as coach Pullela Gopichand motivated her.

Known as a giant-killer in the international arena since making a historic debut winning the Philippines Open in 2006 and, the first Indian woman to win a badminton Grand Prix, Saina has developed a knack of taking on the challenge of giant Asian rivals. This is Saina’s debut Olympics.

Saina got off the blocks in a flash taking a 4-1 lead in the first game before Wang bounced back to pocket four points in a row and put her nose ahead. It was a see-saw battle from there on as neither player was ready to concede an inch.

Saina was up 12-10 but Wang again took five successive points to go up 15-12. Wang was looking to wrap up the game at 19-16 but Saina had other plans. The Indian turned on the heat pocketing the next five points to shut out Wang and take a 1-0 lead.

Stung by the reversal, Wang came back hard and did not give the Indian much chance in the second game wrapping it 21-11 in just 14 minutes and took the match to the decider.

Saina then raised her game and opened up a 6-0 lead in the third game. Wang was under pressure and started making errors as Saina went up 12-4 and 15-7. From there on it was a matter of time before Saina pulled off the biggest win of her career.

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