Just 40 minutes before that, PSPB’s Manika Batra created
history winning her maiden women’s title, beating another new entrant in final,
Pooja Sahasrabuddhle, also of PSPB.
If Amalraj was in a zone of his own, Sathiyan was not
lagging behind. But what made the ultimate difference was Amalraj played
percentage game, driving well and executing his shots with pin-pointed
precision. On the other hand, Sathiyan seemed to be playing under enormous
pressure and it was telling on his play.
The fortune of pendulum kept swinging with both players
taking the alternate sets. But the fifth game changed it all when Amalraj ran
off with a quick lead and mounting pressure on his rival. Sathiyan, despite
taking time-off for a quick consultation with his coach and former national
champion S. Raman, things did not go his way.
Once Amalraj had made it 3-2, it was just a matter of time
for him before pulling the shutters down on Sathiyan. As is his practice, Amalraj
let out a big blurt in celebration and kept himself to a limit this time before
lifting the Maharaja Pithapuram Cup and taking home the Rs. 2.2 lakh prize
money.
Nerve-wrecker
Nobody deserved to lose this nerve-wracking final. After
all, both Manika Batra and Pooja Sahasrabuddhe were playing their maiden final
with the obvious aim. Today, luck was on Manika’s side—both players missed two
title-points each—as she sent a power-packed forehand to the extreme right of
Pooja to her bewilderment. She tried hard to reach for the ball even as it
swerved from its path and out of Pooja’s reach.
Manika let out a weak cry and raised her arms up in
jubilation even as her Coach Sandeep Gupta wiped the tears rolling down his
eyes and stood up to welcome his student. A gentle pat on her back and a small
hug conveyed a million worlds from him.
Coming to the match, when Manika took the first set it
looked things were going one way. But Pooja changed the course and kept her
very much in the reckoning until the last point.
Fortunes fluctuated from one extreme to another and a guess
was always hazarduous. Manika was 7-5 up but went 7-8 down in the decider. From
there, she grew in confidence and attacked to pick two more points. At 10-8,
she served twice for the title point but Pooja saved both for a deuce. With the
service back with her, Pooja went 11-10 up and squandered her first match
point. Against at 12-11, Manika saved one more. And that signified, for the
second time, the Travancore Cup and the winner’s purse of Rs. 1.3 lakh slipping
of her hands. Pooja, however, will go home with just half the amount.
“A great relief and am very happy to have won a senior
title,” said Manika in a choked voice.
Sharath disappoints
Yet again Sharath Kamal bowed out in the semifinals and this
time without a fight against G. Sathiyan. What was disappointing was the way
the six-time national champion and the top seed here surrendered. Except for
the opening game, Sharath led comfortably in every subsequent set—6-3, 6-2 and
6-0. Probably, his heart was willing for another fight back but not the body.
Sharath may have been in some discomfiture and that was very
much evident because he was unable to move well and reach the ball. On the
other hand, Sathiyan was growing in confidence with astonishing winner seven as
Sharath dropped his guard. Every time he took the lead, he found Sathiyan
making his way up and go over his rival.
Incidentally, this was Sathiyan’s second consecutive final
entry. For Sharath, his last singles title came at Kolkata in 2010 and twice he
had finished runner-up to Amalraj at Lucknow
(2011) and Soumyajit Ghosh at Raipur
(2012).
The 4-0 win would have provided Sathiyan another good
platform to go for his maiden title which he missed at Pudhucherry last year,
but his opponent Amalraj was even better when he dethroned national champion
Soumyajit Ghosh with a 4-1 verdict.
Ghosh was blunted from the word go as Amalraj played
brilliantly and did not yield even an inch to the defending champion.
What made the semifinal more interesting was the fast-paced game the two played
with a lot of good rallies and brilliant winners. In fact, some of those
shots from both hissed past the edge of the table, keeping their fans on real
tenterhooks.
In women’s semifinals, No. 1 Manika Batra blanked out
Krittwika Sinha Roy in less than 25 minutes while Pooja Sahasrabuddhe had to
bring out her best against the resolute Madhurika Patkar. However, the second
named was unable to repeat her quarterfinal performance when she beat top-seed
Mouma Das last evening. Yet, Madhurika tried to stage a comeback but Pooja
never allowed her to close in.
Results:
Men’s Singles: Final: Anthony Amalraj (PSPB_ bt G.
Sathiyan (PSPB) 4-2 (11-5, 7-11, 11-7, 8-11, 11-4, 11-9); Semifinals: G.
Sathiyan (PSPB) bt A. Sharath Kamal 4-0 (12-10, 11-8, 11-8, 11-3), Anthony
Amalraj (PSPB) bt Soumyajit Ghosh (PSPB) 4-1 (11-6, 11-5, 5-11, 11-7, 13-11).
Doubles: Final: Abhishek Yadav/Sudhanshu Grover
(Raj) bt Arjun Ghosh/Anirban Ghosh (WB) 3-0 (11-4, 11-9,11-9); Semifinals: Abhishek
Yadav/Sudhanshu Grover (Raj) bt Nithin Thiruvengadam (CB)/Sourav Saha (PSPB)
11-9, 11-6, 11-2, Arjun Ghosh/Anirban Ghosh (WB) bt Ravindra
Kotiyan/Omkar Torgalkar (RSPB) 3-1 (11-9, 8-11, 11-9, 14-12).
Women’s Singles: Final: Manika Batra (PSPB) bt Pooja
Sahasrabuddhe (PSPB) 4-3 (11-3, 8-11, 11-8, 3-11, 11-7, 7-11, 14-12); Semifinals:
Manika Batra (PSPB) bt Krittwika Sinha Roy (WB) 4-0 (11-7, 11-5, 11-9, 11-7),
Pooja Sahasrabuddhe (PSPB) bt Madhurika Patkar (Mah) 4-2 (8-11, 11-6, 11-9,
8-11, 12-10, 11-7).
Doubles: Final: Krittwika Sinha Roy/Mousumi Paul (WB)
bt Mouma Das/K. Shamini (PSPB) 3-2 (13-11, 7-11, 9-11, 11-8, 12-10); Semifinals: Mouma
Das/K.Shamani (PSPB) bt Seraha Jocob/Maria Rony (KRL) 11-5, 11-8, 11-6,
Mousmi Paul /Krittwika Sinha Roy (WB) bt Divya Deshpande/Madhurika Patkar (Mah)
8-11, 11-8, 11-8, 11-8.
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