Visakhapatnam, October 21, 2016: With most favourites, including
A. Sharath Kamal, taking top spots in men’s singles qualifying group matches,
nobody expects anything contrary to happen even in main draw’s first round
outings.
However, a few matches witnessed qualifiers under pressure
to meet the standards with at least two matches going down to the wire in the
11Even Sports National Ranking (South Zone) Table Tennis Championships at the
Rajiv Gandhi Indoor Stadium here today.
The first round outing for Nishaad Shah of Air India was a real tough one, thanks to his rival
Suraj Das from West Bengal which the Air India
boy won 4-3. But the match was a thriller in the sense it was decided in the
seventh game when Nishaad closed out on his opponent 7-11, 11-7, 7-11, 11-4,
11-9, 14-12, 11-6.
Suraj frittered away two match points in the sixth game and
so did Nishaad when he lost two game points before winning it to heave a big
sigh of relief. Drained out as he was, Suraj failed to motivate himself in the
decider which Nishaad won without any trouble.
In the second, Sanmay Paranjape of West
Bengal outwitted Kishore Kumar Divakar of Tamil Nadu 4-3 in a
match of equals. The West Bengal boy scored
more winners than his rival even as the TN boy failed to capitalize when
situated presented him with chances.
EASY FOR SHARATH
There were quite a few matches that threw up 4-2 results
like the ones between Harsh Sachnandani of Gujarat who beat Subham Ojha of
Rajasthan,Talangana’s Lahoti Harshavardhan defeated Lalathunhlua of Mizoram,
AAI’s Sarthak Gandhi downed Souvik Kar of PSPB and Sougata Sarkar of LIC
overcame Rakshit Barigidad of Karnataka.
As for Sharath, he had an easy 4-0 passage against Subhra
Roy Chouwdhury of MP and will now meet in the second round left-handed Abhishek
Yadav of PSPB, who struggled to win 4-2 against Tamil Nadu’s Ananth Devarajan,
later today.
By his standards, Sharath is expected to go through to the
pre-quarterfinals where he is slated to meet No. 2 seed Sanil Shetty who will
play his first outing this evening when he takes on Nishaad Shah.
SHAIILU’S BRAVE FIGHT
In women’s singles, with a well spread out byes, only 16
players were involved in the eight first-round matches, some of which kept
everyone interested. Andhra’s promising prospect Shailu Noorbasha did put up a
fight but Tamil Nadu’s Harshavardini won 10-12, 11-8, 11-1, 11-13, 11-7, 11-5
to move into the second round. AAI’s Selenadeepth Selvakumar was taken some
distance by Haryana’s Riti Shankar before the former winning it 7-11, 12-10,
11-6, 11-4, 9-11, 11-9. So was the case with RBI’s Shweta Parte who had to
bring in all her experience to account for Sikha Jacob of Kerala 11-7, 9-11,
11-8, 7-11, 11-6, 11-8.
NANDITA STRUGGLES
But it was the match between PSPB veteran Nandita Saha and
Kritika Malik of Delhi
that pushed spectators to the edge of their seats. Nandita squandered a 2-1
lead to trail 2-3 as Kritika put up a brave fight to outscore her rival in the
fourth and fifth games.
The experienced PSPB girl, however, managed to pull it
off with two crispy sixth and seventh games to which the Delhi lass had no answer.
In Youth Girls, there were quite a few upsets in the latter
groups. For instance, Shrubabati Moitra of West Bengal upstaged Puja Paul of North Bengal to enter the main draw. Her 3-1 (11-7, 1-14,
11-9, 7-11, 11-8) win against Puja in group 15 saw through to her stage 2 entry.
In group 16, it was even worse as Maharashtra ’s
Shruti Amrute’s 11-6, 9-11, 3-11, 3-11 loss to Delhis Ishita Gupta sent her out
of reckoning. Ishita, in fact, had to play a good game against Tulika Roy of West Bengal to win 11-7, 1-11, 9-11, 11-9, 11-6 and seal
her main draw spot.
Seraha Jacob of Kerala beat Delhi’s Vanshika Bhargava 10-12,
11-8, 11-2, 11-5 to take the lone qualifier’s slot from group 17 while in group
18, Sumana Saha of West Bengal ousted Shrusti Gupta of Delhi in a clinching
match which the Bengal paddler won 11-2, 13-11, 5-11, 11-5. Kushi Viswanath of
Karnataka bowed out after a tie ensued between her and Kaushani Nath of West
Bengal Despite both having five points, the latter moved in with better
average.
But for these abnormalities, every other player from the
rest of groups had no problem whatsoever as they sailed into the knockout
stage.
TTFI release
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