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Thursday, August 02, 2012 8:48:45 AM (IST)  

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Olympics: Kashyap, Saina Bring Joy, Leander-Vishnu Lose

London, Aug 2 (IANS): Indian shuttlers Parupalli Kashyap and Saina Nehwal raised hopes with their scintillating displays but the nation went out of contention in men's doubles tennis competition as Leander Paes-Vishnu Vardhan went down after a gallant fight on a mixed day for India at the scandal-hit London Olympics here Wednesday.

Kashyap created history by becoming the first Indian male badminton player to make it to the Games quarter final, while Saina made the cut for the second time in the quadrennial event, before old warhorse Leander and his young partner Vishnu came close to an upset win over the second seeded French pair of Michael Llodra and Jo Wilfried Tsonga before losing in a close three-setter 7-6 (7-3), 4-6 and 6-3.

In the boxing ring, Manoj Kumar reached the pre-quarterfinals in the 64 kg class by scoring an emphatic victory over Serdar Hudayberdiyev of Turkmenistan late Tuesday night.

However, the nation's forgettable campaign in archery came to an end Wednesday as world number 1 Deepika Kumari suffered an opening round loss while the hockey team stumbled to their second back-to-back defeat.

The 25-year-old Kashyap won a tough match 21-14, 15-21, 21-9, against Sri Lankan Niluka Karunaratne at the Wembley Arena to go one up on the previous best performance by Dipankar Bhattarcharjee in the 1992 Barcelona Games where he lost in the third round.

In the first game, Kashyap rallied back after being 1-6 down to draw parity at 7-7 and then went from strength to strength to pocket it in 20 minutes.

The Sri Lankan came back strongly to take the second game, before the decider saw a neck-and-neck fight for supremacy till 5-all when Kashyap took off and cantered to a win to set up a last eight clash with top seed and Beijing Games silver medallist Lee Chong Wei of Malaysia.

India's strongest medal hope in badminton Saina, in contrast, looked completely in control of the court. She pulverised her ageing rival Jie Yao of the Netherlands with a flurry of deft placement, brilliant net play and lethal smashes to carve out a 21-14 21-16 victory in only 38 minutes.

However, the day also saw a scandal break out with the organisers disqualifying eight women badminton players from the doubles event for throwing matches to get a favourable opponent.

The pairs are: Wang Xiaoli and Yu Yang of China; Greysia Polii and Meiliana Jauhari of Indonesia; Jung Kyung Eun and Kim Ha Na of South Korea; and Ha Jung Eun and Kim Min Jung, also of South Korea.

The Chinese World Champion duo of Wang and Yu and their South Korean rivals Jung and Kim were jeered and booed by the crowd Tuesday after hitting serves into the net and striking easy shots long or wide.

The umpire and the referee warned all the four players, but the situation didn't change. The Chinese women eventually lost 14-21, 11-21 and as a result they would not meet their compatriots until the final.

The farce was repeated in the next game between South Korea's Ha and Kim and Indonesia's Jauhari and Polii. Both teams were also warned for deliberately trying to lose.

The Indian pair of Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnappa, who narrowly missed a quarter final berth by finishing third in their group, lodged a formal complaint accusing the Japanese pair of Mizuki Fujii and Reika Kakiiwa of "wanting to lose" a Olympic Games group match against the Chinese Taipei team, but it was rejected.

At the Lords ground, India's disastrous archery campaign came to an unceremonious end with the fancied Deepika Kumari suffering a shock defeat in the opening women's individual elimination round.

Jharkhand girl Deepika, rated as India's biggest medal prospect going into the Olympics, was shown the door by Amy Oliver of Great Britain, who won 6-2.

The 18-year-old's loss completed India's misery in the London Games where four of the six-member contingent of archers fell flat in the opening individual round. Both the men's and women's teams also stumbled at the first hurdle.

On the hockey turf, New Zealand chalked up a 3-1 win over India who thus slid to their second defeat in as many matches.

After a sensational start when Sandeep Singh converted a second minute penalty corner, India faded away as the Kiwis came storming back with goals by Andrew Hayward (13th), Phillip Burrows (24th) and Nicolas Wilson (29th), and then nursed the lead to the end.

In shooting, Indian girls Rahi Sarnobat and Annu Raj Singh finished at lowly 19th and 30th respectively to bow out at the qualification stage. The 25-year-old was in control throughout the bout as he registered an easy 13-7 win.

Less than a week into the games, the Indian challenge is already over in five - archery, table tennis, rowing, judo and weightlifting - of the 13 disciplines the country is taking part. It is now upto the remaining athletes, especially those in tennis, shooting, boxing and wrestling to do justice to the unprecedented pre-games hype seen in the country about their prospects.


Comments on this article
Rowena, India
Thursday, August 02, 2012

Congrats Kashyap and Saina. Only prayer don't follow in the footsteps of Mahesh Bupathi and Rohan who are a disgrace to our country and a bad example to all young players

 
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