The World No.12 beat the seventh-seeded Chinese 21-18, 21-17 in 55 minutes at the Tianhe Indoor Stadium.
This will be only the third instance that an Indian will bring home a medal at the Worlds.
Prakash Padukone won the men’s singles bronze in 1983 at Copenhagen
while Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnappa won another bronze in the women’s
doubles event in the last edition at London in 2011.
Saina and Kashyap suffer defeats
The elusive World Championship medal once again slipped through Saina
Nehwal’s fingers as the Indian ace suffered a straight-game defeat
against Korean Yeon Ju Bae in the quarterfinals.
The London Olympics bronze-medallist, a quarterfinalist in the last two
editions as well, was erratic and could not hold her nerves as she went
down rather tamely 21-23 9-21 in a 40-minute match at the Tianhe Indoor
Stadium.
Kashyap, who was also playing at the adjacent court, played out of his
skin but still could not get across world number three Du Pengyu of
China. His gallant fight ended with a 21-16 20-22 15-21 loss in an
energy-sapping contest which lasted one hour and 15 minutes here.
Saina played an aggressive game in the opening match and opened up a
11-7 lead at the interval. Her baseline smashes got her a lot of points
as the Indian was in control of the match.
However, Bae, who looked off-colour initially as she struggled with her
strokes and reach, slowly narrowed down the lead and clawed back at
19-19. Saina was struggling with the drift as she lost a lot of points
hitting wide. The Indian also faltered at the net.
From nowhere, Bae not only came into the contest but also exerted the
pressure on the Indian and after a hard fight won the opening game when
Saina’s shuttle kissed the net and toppled outside the court.
Losing the opening game dented Saina’s confidence as she failed to put
any resistance to Bae strokes. Bae, on the other hand, was confidence
personified as she played like a champion and decimated the Indian.
The left-handed Korean dominated the proceedings completely as after a
5-5 initial fight, she moved to the interval with a 11-6 lead. The
Korean’s strokes were powerful and drops deceptive as she reduced Saina
to a bystander.
National coach Pullela Gopichand, who was also monitoring the Kashyap’s
match at the adjacent court, also could not lift Saina’s spirits at the
break as the Indian completely resigned in the final moments of the
game.
Bae, on the other hand, held her nerves and wrapped up the match quickly to seal her place at the semifinals.
World number 17 Kashyap opened up a 8-5 lead but Du clawed back and
moved into the break with a two-point cushion at 11-9. The Indian then
grabbed four straight points to wrest the lead and though Du caught up
at 13-13, Kashyap kept his nose ahead to pocket the first game.
In the second game, Du zoomed to a 7-0 lead but Kashyap played a steady
game and slowly caught up with the Chinese at 16-16 and turned the
tables at 19-17. The Indian also had a game point at 20-19 but Du held
his nerve and roared back into the contest.
In the decider, Kashyap marched ahead with a 9-4 lead but Du caught up
at 12-12 and then turned the tables as he grabbed a 15-12 lead. The
Indian tried his best to claw back but Du didn’t give any chance to
Kashyap and sealed the match with some quick points.
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