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Saina Nehwal shining in Sydney

Updated on: 12 June,2016 08:55 AM IST  | 
PTI |

Indian ace shuttler Saina Nehwal one win away from her season’s maiden title after stunning World No 2 Yihan Wang 21-8, 21-12 to enter final

Saina Nehwal shining in Sydney

Indiau00c3u00a2u00c2u0080u00c2u0099s Saina Nehwal returns to Wang Yihan of China during the Australian Open semi-final match in Sydney on Saturday. PIC/AFP

Sydeny: Indian ace shuttler Saina Nehwal is one win away from her maiden title of the season as she advanced to the finals of Australian Open Super Series by beating World No 2 Yihan Wang of China in the women’s singles event here on Saturday.
Saina received a big boost ahead of her Rio Games campaign as she defeated 2011 world champion and 2012 Olympic silver medallist Yihan, seeded fourth, 21-8, 21-12 in just over half an hour in the semi-finals.


Saina Nehwal
India’s Saina Nehwal returns to Wang Yihan of China during the Australian Open semi-final match in Sydney on Saturday. PIC/AFP


The London Olympic bronze medallist Indian will take on World No 12 Sun Yu of China, who defeated third seed and compatriot Li Xuerui in another semi-finals, in the summit clash today.


The girl from Hyderabad, who had won the Australian Open in 2014, has a 5-1 head-to-head record against Sun, who had upstaged the Indian once at the 2013 China Open.

Yihan Wang
Yihan Wang

Srikanth bows out
In men’s singles, Kidambi Srikanth’s fight ended with a disappointing 20-22, 13-21 loss against Denmark’s Hans-Kristian Vittinghus in a 43-minute semi-final battle.

Saina was at her dominating best in the opening game. She executed her plans perfectly and zoomed to a 15-6 lead against Yihan.

A quick movement and a brilliant smash down the line took Saina to 12 game points and she grabbed the first game when Yihan hit wide to earn the bragging rights. In the second game, Saina did not allow the intensity to slip and rode on Yihan’s sluggish movement and inconsistent strokes to once again open up a 11-4 lead with a cross court return as they moved to the interval.

After the break, Saina continued playing her own game, often reprimanding herself or accepting a missed chance during a rally. She changed the pace and came up with a wide variety of strokes to make Yihan run across the court.

Her attacking winners gave her results as Saina reached her match point when Yihan hit the net. The Indian failed to reach for a back hand return, netted a stroke before grabbing the final point when Yihan found the net again.

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