Sunday, 23 December 2012

Kashyap wins Syed Modi title


P Kashyap ended India’s wait for a Grand Prix gold title in the men’s singles category when he got the better of Tanongsak Saensomboonsuk of Thailand to lift the Syed Modi title in Lucknow on Sunday.
The world number 30, who was trailing his Thai opponent 3-1 in head-to-head record before the summit clash, kept his nerves to win the final 21-19, 14-21, 21-17 in one hour and 11 minutes to become the first player to lift an international title of such a stature.
Only Saina Nehwal and the mixed doubles combination of Jwala Gutta and V Diju have won a GP gold title since the new tournament structure started in 2009.
The last time any Indian came close to winning a Grand Prix title was in 2008 when Chetan Anand went down in the final of the India Open in Hyderabad against Thailand's Boonsak Ponsana.
However, a maiden GP gold title eluded P V Sindhu as the second seed went down 21-15, 18-21, 21-18 in a marathon summit clash against seventh seed Lindaweni Fanetri of Indonesia.

Wednesday, 19 December 2012

Saina’s withdrawal takes sheen away from Syed Modi tourney


On a day when Pratul Joshi created the biggest upset of his badminton career by beating former world and Olympic champion Taufik Hidayat of Indonesia, it was yet another pull out of Saina Nehwal that would dominate the headlines at the Dr K L Garg - Syed Modi International Grand Prix Gold badminton tournament on Wednesday.
The world number 3, who reportedly took the court only because of the insistence from her sponsor Sahara and Badminton Association of India, played for just under half an hour and was holding two match points against Ksenia Polikarpova of Russia when she clinched her leg and conceded the first round encounter.
Saina’s withdrawal immediately let the tongues wagging as this is the second time in a row that the London Olympic bronze medallist has disappointed the badminton fans in Lucknow. Last year, Saina came to the Uttar Pradesh capital but withdrew from her first round encounter citing fever and fatigue.
While all these reasons are disputable and there is a vertical divide among BAI officials for and against Saina, the matter of fact is that the 2010 Commonwealth Games gold medallist does not benefit at all from playing in such tournaments as she now only concentrates on the 12-tournament Super Series circuit.
According to the ranking calculation norms of the Badminton World Federation, the top-10 results of any player are only calculated towards the final ranking and hence Saina prefers to train and prepare for these tournaments rather than play in GP Gold and GP events.
While the Indian ace is absolutely right in following this course of action as a professional, the BAI officials are angry that she is “not doing her bit” for Indian badminton. And they have a point.
The world’s top players, including men’s world number one Lee Chong Wei, multiple Olympic gold medallist and world champion Lin Dan and others play the GP Gold events in their respective countries despite the events not adding any value to their career.
On the other hand, Saina has refrained from playing any domestic tournament or an international meet apart from the India Super Series in the last few years.
It is an open secret that the mere presence of the 22-year-old makes badminton lovers flock to the tournament venue and that definitely adds value to the tournament.
The BAI has already taken a decision at its last AGM to make it mandatory for players to play at least two domestic ranking tournaments and the senior nationals. It would be interesting to see whether the decision makers in BAI have the courage to force Saina to follow suit.

Tuesday, 4 December 2012

Badminton Addicts Doubles challenge at Bombay Gymkhana


Bombay Gymkhana would host the state level BG Yonex Badminton Addicts Doubles Challenge at the gymkhana pavilion on December 8-9.
Conceptualised as a fun tournament that pits the state’s best shuttlers with some of the veterans in a round-robin format, the competition will see 16 pairs vying for the title and a prize purse of Rs 12,000 over the two days.
The 16 pairs have been divided into four groups of four pairs each in an all-play-all format with the top two pairs in each group qualifying for the quarter-finals.

Pairs: 

Ayaz Bilawala/Shailesh Daga; Amol Shah/Nigel D’Sa; Mayur Tawade/Ameya Joshi; Aditya Pandya/Anil Nair; Mangirish Palekar/Abhishek Parikh; Abhidnya Sawant/Prasad Shetty; Shlok Ramchandran/Kaushal Dharmamer; Vignesh Devlekar/Sudhanshu Medshikar; Firoj Mulani/Anmol Beharani; Arjit Bose/Akshat Patil; Sanket Shirvade/Amit Khadgi; Deepak Jetley/Harsh Jhaveri; Jatin Agarwal/Naval Bir Kumar; Vilas Kuwale/Yogesh Padukone; Prashant Bahatare/Abhishek Kulkarni; Jishnu Sanyal/Eshan Naqvi