Sindhu storms into final, Sakshi gets bronze

RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug 18:

PV Sindhu of India celebrates after winning her semi-final match against Nozomi Okuhara of Japan.
PV Sindhu of India celebrates after winning her semi-final match against Nozomi Okuhara of Japan.

Lanky shuttler P V Sindhu made an epoch-making entry into the final of the women’s singles in Olympic Games badminton when she outclassed Japan’s higher-ranked Nozomi Okuhara and assured herself and the country of a silver medal here today.
Sindhu, ranked 10th in the world, went one better than her senior Saina Nehwal, bronze medal winner in London four years ago, by becoming the first ever Indian to enter the summit clash in the shuttle game in the quadrennial sports spectacle.
Sindhu defeated her short-statured, third-seeded Japanese rival, the current All England champion and world no. Six, 21-19 21-10 in 49 minutes with superb, attacking play to enter tomorrow’s gold medal clash.
The Indian shuttler from Hyderabad, a two-time bronze medalist in world championships, will meet Spain’s world no. 1 Carolina Marin who ousted defending champion Li Xuerei of China in the first semi-final with a 21-14 21-16 victory.
Sindhu’s heart-warming feat came a day after woman grappler Sakshi Malik had won a bronze in the 58 kg class to end the medal drought for India in the Games on the 12th day of competition.
However, another wrestler made a tame exit from the competition today to end the women’s campaign here.
Babita Kumari lost her opening women’s 53 kg category wrestling bout 1-5 against Maria Prevolaraki of Greece and got eliminated from the Games.
Much was expected of Babita, winner of two medals in past Commonwealth Games and bronze medalist in the World Championship in 2012, when she got on the mat a day after teammate Sakshi had provided India with their first medal in this Brazilian city.
But the 26-year-old grappler could not succeed against the tight defense put up by her Greek rival and lost points in both the periods of their pre-quarter final bout. (PTI)