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PV Sindhu enters badminton pre-quarterfinals at Tokyo Olympics

The 26-year-old Indian badminton star prevailed over Hong Kong's NY Cheung in straight sets in a 35-minute match

File photo: PV Sindhu has her eye on gold at the Olympics in July 2021 but warns the road to the final in Tokyo will be tough with most of the world's top players in contention. (Photo by Adrian DENNIS / AFP)
File photo: PV Sindhu has her eye on gold at the Olympics in July 2021 but warns the road to the final in Tokyo will be tough with most of the world's top players in contention. (Photo by Adrian DENNIS / AFP) (AFP)

Tokyo, Jul 28 (PTI) Reigning world champion P V Sindhu advanced to the pre-quarterfinals of women's singles badminton event at the Tokyo Olympics after beating Hong Kong's NY Cheung in a group J match here on Wednesday.

The 26-year-old Indian, who had claimed a silver medal in the last edition in Rio, prevailed over world No. 34 Cheung 21-9 21-16 in a 35-minute match to top the group. This was Sindhu's sixth win over Cheung in as many meetings.

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"I found my rhythm from the second game on and I finished it off. It was a fast game and I made a couple of unforced errors. I changed my tactics and got things under control. This type of test is important before a big match," Sindhu said after the match.

World No. 7 Sindhu will meet Denmark's world no. 12 Mia Blichfeldt, who topped Group I. Sindhu has a 4-1 head-to-head record against Blichfeldt, whose only win against the Indian was at the Yonex Thailand Open earlier this year.

"It's not going to be an easy game. I need to recover well and come back stronger. I've played her a couple of times, every point is going to be important. She's an aggressive player so I need to be aggressive as well," Sindhu said. The shuttler from Hyderabad, seeded sixth, had defeated Ksenia Polikarpova of Israel in her opening match.

Sindhu used her repertoire of strokes, and her ability to vary the pace troubled the Hong Kong player. Sindhu made her opponent run around the court and will then come up with perfect placements to win points. Cheung got a few points with her deceptive cross court returns but she committed many unforced errors to have any chance of putting pressure on the Indian in the first game.

P.V. Sindhu in action in the women's singles badminton match against Hong Kong China's Ngan Yi Cheung, at the Summer Olympics 2020, in Tokyo, Wednesday, July 28, 2021.
P.V. Sindhu in action in the women's singles badminton match against Hong Kong China's Ngan Yi Cheung, at the Summer Olympics 2020, in Tokyo, Wednesday, July 28, 2021. (PTI)

Sindhu led 6-2 early on before galloping to 10-3. She committed a rare error at 10-3 before entering the interval at 11-5. The Indian didn't have any trouble after resumption as she zoomed to 20-9 and pocketed the opening game when Cheung netted a return.

Cheung was looking to script a turnaround in the second game as she extended the rallies and with Sindhu too struggling to control the shuttle, the duo moved to 6-6 and 8-8. Sindhu also made judgement errors before sending the shuttle wide again to hand over a slender one point advantage to her opponent.

Cheung tried to put pressure on Sindhu but the Indian wriggled out with her better strokeplay which included a few straight down the line smashes. Sindhu moved to 19-14 before grabbing six match points but she missed the lines again and netted a shot to squander two match points before sealing it with a smash.

Later in the day, B Sai Praneeth will take on M Caljouw of Netherlands in his second and final men's singles Group D match. On Tuesday, Indian shuttlers Chirag Shetty and Satwiksairaj Rankireddy suffered a heartbreak after they failed to qualify for the men's doubles quarterfinals at the Tokyo Olympics despite winning two matches in their group.

The Indian duo had emerged victorious against the England pair of Ben Lane and Sean Vendy in their final Group A match but still missed out on qualifying for the quarterfinals after the three pairs ended with same points and games won were considered to identify the qualifiers.

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