India Open: Zulkarnain beats Srikanth

New Delhi [India]: Malaysian qualifier Iskandar Zulkarnain caused the biggest upset of the Yonex-Sunrise Dr Akhilesh Das Gupta India Open 2018, a part of the HSBC Badminton World Federation (BWF) World Tour 500, when he took down home favourite and World No. 3 Kidambi Srikanth in straight games here.

The 26-year-old Zulkarnain, ranked 85th in the world, made the most of an error-prone display by his much higher ranked rival to win 21-19, 21-17 in 43 minutes at New Delhi’s Siri Fort Complex indoor courts on Thursday.

“My goal was to upset higher ranked players in the tournament and I did so. Hopefully, I can continue the winning run,” said a delighted Zulkarnain. He will now run into another Indian, the doughty Sameer Verma, in the next round.

Verma, ranked 30th in the world, upstaged former World No. 3 Tommy Sugiarto of Indonesia 21-18, 19-21, 21-17 in a gruelling battle that last one hour and 20 minutes.

Dwelling on his defeat, the second-seeded Srikanth, who is coming off an injury layoff, said: “It was not that I played badly. I was even leading 16-14 in the second game but it was just that I could not score those crucial points. Iskandar picked up shuttles from unimaginable positions which made it tough for me.”

Olympic champion Carolina Marin faced a tough examination from Chinese teenager Gao Fangjie before entering the quarterfinal round while Indian heavyweights PV Sindhu, Saina Nehwal and eighth seed Sai Praneeth eased into the last eight stage without much fuss.

In one of the longest matches of the tournament that lasted one hour and 23 minutes, Marin had to use all her experience to down the 19-year-old China Open runner-up 15-21, 21-15, 21-11.

Marin’s opponent in the quarterfinals will be sixth seed Cheung Ngan Yi of Hong Kong who handed a 21-4, 21-7 drubbing to Thailand’s Thamolwan Poopradubsil.

Sindhu felt she has work to do in the upcoming rounds after upstaging Bulgarian Linda Zetchiri 21-10, 21-14.

“My performance was not up to the mark today. I had not played her before so I didn’t quite know how she plays. It was a tricky match but I am happy that I pulled it off,” said the defending champion who will be up against eighth seed Beatriz Corrales in the next round.

The Spaniard downed Shivani Ruthvika Gadde 21-19, 21-16.

“Now, I have to be well-prepared against my Spanish opponent in the quarterfinals,” Sindhu added.

Saina downed Denmark’s Line Hojmark Kjaersfeldt 21-12, 21-11 in 28 minutes and will meet fifth seed Beiwan Zhang of USA in the quarters.

Sai Praneeth defeated Hu Yun of Hong Kong 21-10, 21-15 to set up a quarterfinal meeting with third seed Chou Tien Chen of Chinese Taipei.

Qualifier Shreyansh Jaiswal put in a spirited display to stretch Parupalli Kashyap before bowing out 21-19, 19-21, 21-12. Kashyap will face Qiao Bin in the quarterfinals with the Chinese defeated qualifier Kartikey Gulshan Kumar 21-7, 21-3.

Meanwhile in the mixed doubles, the Indian pair of the young Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and the experienced Ashwini Ponnappa stunned third seeds Tan Kian Menga and Lai Pei Jing of Malaysia 21-16, 15-21, 23-21 in a humdinger that lasted more than an hour. It was the first time that the Indian duo was entering the quarterfinals of a Super Series event since they teamed up 10 months ago.

Terming it as “important victory” for their partnership, Ashwini said, “it was a crazy finish. We really wanted to win this as we were leading (in the match). I’m really happy it went our way.”

They will take on fifth seeds Mathias Christiansen/ Christinna Pedersen of Denmark who downed the Indians Rohan Kapoor and Kuhoo Garg (Ind) 21-10, 21-11.

The Key Second Round Results

Men’s singles

Isqandar Zulkarnain (Mas) bt 2-Kidambi Srikanth (Ind) 21-19, 21-17

3-Chou Tien Chen (Tpe) bt Daren Liew (Mas) 21-19, 17-21, 21-6

4-Shi Yuqi (Chn) bt Hsu Jen Hao (Tpe) 21-10, 21-17

6-Wang Tzu Wei (Tpe) bt Vladimir Malkov (Rus) 19-21, 21-18, 21-12

8-Sai Praneeth (Ind) bt Hu Yun (HKG) 21-10, 21-15

Sameer Verma (Ind) bt Tommy Sugiarto (Ina) 21-18, 19-21, 21-17

Parupalli Kashyap (Ind) bt Shreyansh Jaiswal (Ind) 21-19, 19-21, 21-12

Men’s doubles

1-Marcus Gideon/ Kevin Sanjaya (Ina) bt Tinn Isriyanet/ Kittisak Namdash 21-18, 28-26

Han Chengkai/ Zhou Haodong (Chn) bt 2-Mathias Boe/ Carsten Mogensen 12-21, 23-21, 21-14

4-Kim Astrup/ Anders Skaarup Rasmussen bt Francis Alwin/ K Nandagopal (Ind) 21-13, 21-10.

Women’s singles

1-PV Sindhu (Ind) bt Linda Zetchiri (Bul) 21-10, 21-14

2-Carolina Marin (Esp) bt Gao Fangjie (Chn) 15-21, 21-15, 21-11

3-Ratchanok Intanon (Tha) bt Aakarshi Kashyap 21-11, 21-12

4-Saina Nehwal (Ind) bt Line Hojmark Kjaersfeldt (Den) 21-12, 21-11

5-Beiwan Zhang (USA) bt Mugdha Agrey 21-12, 21-16

6-Cheung Ngan Yi (Tpe) bt Daren Liew (Mas) 21-19, 17-21, 21-6

7-Yip Pui Yin (HKG) bt Lyanny Alessandra Mainaky (Ina) 21-13, 21-14

8-Beatriz Corrales (ESP) bt Shivani Ruthvika Gadde (Ind) 21-19, 21-16

Women’s doubles

1-Kamilla Rytter Juhl/ Christinna Pedersen (Den) bt Cao Tong Wei/ Yu Zheng (Chn) 21-10, 21-17

2-Jongkolphan Kititharakul/ Rawinda Prajongjai (Tha) bt Aparna Balan/ Sruthi KP (Ind) 21-17, 21-5

Mixed doubles

Satwiksairaj Rankireddy/ Ashwini Ponnappa bt 3-Tan Kian Meng/ Lai Pei Jing (Mas) 21-16, 15-21, 23-21

5-Mathias Christiansen/ Christinna Pedersen bt Rohan Kapoor/ Kuhoo Garg (Ind) 21-10, 21-11

8-Pranaav Jerry Chopra/ Sikki Reddy bt Yogendra Khrishnan (Mas)/ Prajakta Sawant (Ind) 21-10, 21-19. (ANI)