World No.2 Saina Nehwal lost the women's singles final to defending champion Carolina Marin of Spain in the World Badminton Championships on Sunday. The World No.1 Spaniard won 21-16, 21-19 in 59 minutes. Saina settled for the silver
Saina Nehwal loses World Badminton Championships final, settles for silver
Jakarta: Saina Nehwal's quest to become the first Indian world champion in badminton ended in heartbreak as she lost in straight games to title holder Carolina Marin in the summit showdown of the mega-event in Jakarta on Sunday.
The world number two Indian went down 16-21, 19-21 to her numero uno nemesis from Spain in a match which lasted 59 minutes. It was the second successive loss in a major final for Saina even though the silver medal she settled for is the best performance by an Indian in the showpiece.
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Carolina Marin of Spain (R) poses with her gold medal next to runner-up Saina Nehwal of India (L) at the awards ceremony following the women's singles final at the 2015 World Championships Badminton tournament in Jakarta on August 16, 2015. Pic/AFP
Saina had incidentally lost to the same opponent in the All England Championships final earlier this year.
This was India's fifth medal at the World Championship after P V Sindhu clinched the bronze twice in 2013 and 2014 and Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnappa notched up a bronze in women's doubles at the 2011 edition. Legendary shuttler Prakash Padukone was the first Indian to win a bronze at the 1983 edition.
With a 3-1 head-to-head record over the Spaniard going into the match, Saina had the edge on paper. But the gritty Spaniard, who got the better of Saina in the All England finals in their most recent encounter, seemed more pumped up when the proceedings started.
Clenching her fists and letting out a scream at almost every point won by her, Carolina caught the chair umpire's attention more than once for her antics and was even cautioned for abusing her racquet.
However, the world number one made sure that the scorecard ticked in her favour after breaking away from 7-7 when Saina sunk an easy return into the net.
Placed comfortably at 11-8 when the lemon break was taken, Carolina made it 15-9 in no time courtesy errors by Saina and some precisely-placed shots from the baseline.
The beleaguered Indian found it tough to deal with her rival's energy and floundered when challenged on pace. In fact, the fierce smashes, which are a hallmark of Saina's game, came from Carolina's racquet, the most impressive being the one with which she earned her first game point.
Down 13-20, Saina held on for a few points before Carolina closed out the first game when the Indian hit one wide after 24 minutes.
In the second game, however, the Indian came back strongly to start with, inducing regular errors from the aggressive Spaniard. The Indian led 11-6 at the break, riding on a much improved performance in baseline rallies.
But refusing to be bogged down, Carolina, who was far more adventurous than the Indian when it came to approaching the net, recovered with six back-to-points to make it 12-12.
Moving around the court with lightening pace, the Spaniard quite literally tired the Indian with her unrelenting returns, targetting Saina's body with stunning precision.
But it was no stroll in the park for Carolina as Saina held on for some engrossing rallies in a battle of attrition. Locked at 17-17, while Carolina looked consistently fired up, Saina's body language did not seem very positive as her rival took a 20-18 lead to inch towards her second successive world title.
The inevitable was delayed when Carolina squandered the first Championship point before clinching the second and collapsing on to the floor in sheer joy and relief.
On the other hand, a disappointed Saina walked off the court quietly having missed yet another golden opportunity.