![]() From the publishers of THE HINDU
Vol. 24 :: No. 35 :: Sep. 01 - 07, 2001
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BADMINTON/ASIAN SATELLITE CHAMPIONSHIP
Chetan, Aparna triumphKALYAN ASHOKTHE BPL senior prize-money championship, which was a popular National event, has from this year taken a new avatar, that of a Satellite fixture.
K. GOPINATHAN It was a promotion well earned by the sponsor, the consumer electronic giant, and the organiser, Prakash Padukone Badminton Academy, which have been conducting the show in such a classy fashion over the years. The BPL Asian Satellite championship (August 8 to 11) was a huge success, with active participation from good teams from Hong Kong, Thailand, Malaysia and England. All the big names of the game at home were there, barring the All England champion Pullela Gopi Chand, who was busy in the World Grand Prix finals in Brunei, Abhinn Shyam Gupta, the French Open champion, who was unwell, and the former National women's champion Manjusha Kanwar, who was recovering from an injury. Former junior champion, Sachin Ratti, who confirmed his participation, failed to turn up. Despite their absence, the local fans had their fill of top class show and their joy knew bounds when Chetan Anand and Aparna Popat made it an all-India bash, winning the men's and women's singles titles respectively.
K. GOPINATHAN The triumph of these two should be looked at in proper perspective and it was an eye opener in many respects. For all those who had been crying hoarse about the need for Indian players to develop speed and power, the Indian singles sweep underlined the fact that the Indian style of play - deception coupled with control and wristy strokeplay, can still be winning factors at the international level. Even the Bangalore youngster Arvind Bhat, who doesn't play much at this level, displaying those attributes, came up with a dazzling display and troubled a few fancied players. The third seed Chetan Anand rode on his cool temperament, mixing his strokes and came up trumps against the unseeded Malaysian junior champion Allan Tai in the men's final. He won 15-11, 15-7. The 21-year-old Chetan's promise has never been in doubt. The 1999 junior National champion is technically sound with good strokes. If at all there was a failing, it was his lack of complete focus. Chetan now seems to have crossed that hurdle as he played with superb consistency. The victory over Nikhil Kanetkar in the semi-final and later Allan Tai in the final, underlined that aspect. Chetan has certainly come of age with this maiden triumph in the senior ranks. "That I hadn't won a senior title was bothering me for some time. Winning a Satellite tournament has given me a lot of confidence and I will concentrate on playing well at the international level," said an elated Chetan, a ward of the noted coach Bhaskar Babu from Vijayawada.
K. GOPINATHAN Allan Tai comes from that Malaysian stable where the accent is on speed and relentless attack. The gritty 21-year-old Malaysian simply pounded his way through the early rounds, but came dangerously close to succumbing to Arvind Bhat in the quarter-finals. Chetan checked his rival's power play with a judicious blend of attack and defence. He had Tai in a spot with tight net play and stalled him with deceptive flicks and tosses and came up with dazzling half smashes when least unexpected. It was champion stuff all the way. Tai began on a familiar note, attacking strongly from the back court and piled up points. But when Chetan was down 1-10, Tai lowered his guard and the Indian began his revival with some magnificent net play. With the crowd roaring for each point, Chetan powered his way back, finding his rhythm and control. He took 10 points in a canter on his serve to jump to a 12-10 lead. A panicky Tai made a spate of unforced errors and lost his grip, allowing Chetan to take the first game on a rousing note at 15-11. The crowd went delirious with that effort and a charged up Chetan was on a roll from the start in the second game. Tai, who seemed in a daze after the unexpected first game loss, put too many returns over the lines and struggled at 2-7. He did bridge the gap to 5-7, but Chetan snuffed out that brief rally quickly to shut the game and match at 15-5 with a classy net dribble. Earlier, in an all Indian semi-final, Chetan stopped the talented southpaw Nikhil Kanetkar with a tactically sound display. He beat Nikhil, who has come back from a long lay off following a liver infection, at 15-9, 8-15, 15-6. Allan Tai defeated the sixth seeded Thai, Anupap Thirartsakul 17-14, 15-8. Nikhil did well to rally from 2-7 down to level at 8-all in the first game before Chetan pulled away to a 15-9 win. In the second game, Nikhil's early lead had Chetan on the defensive and he quickly went down. But in the decider, it was Chetan who dictated the pace with his rival lapsing into errors. Chetan, playing with the right judgment, flicked and dribbled with precision to outwit Kanetkar. It was Chetan's third win over Nikhil.
K. GOPINATHAN It was a good show by Nikhil in the tournament. In fact he set the tone for a sparkling Indian show in the meet, knocking out the top seed, Andrew South of England, in the last-16 round. In the quarter-finals, Chetan and Nikhil posted quick wins, but the second seed Siddarth Jain lost to Anupap Thirartsakul in a stormy tie at 10-15, 11-15. Jain, who has been nursing a knee problem for some time now, was hustled by the frisky Thai and the Indian was even shown a yellow card for dissent and racket abuse on match point by referee Ms. Vrushali Upadhaya. The best performance from an Indian angle came from Arvind Bhat, who beat the fourth seed Mark Burgess of England in the prequarter-finals and stretched Allan Tai with his skilful play. But Tai scraped home at 17-14, 9-15, 15-11. Aparna Popat returned to centre stage, claiming the women's singles title. National women's champion for the past four years, there are no more peaks at home for Aparna to conquer and her focus is on regaining her place in the world scene, where she was ranked No. 16 in 1999. Now ranked in the 90s, Aparna's win should see her climb by at least 20 points. "I am looking forward to getting back to where I was. The senior ABC championship will be a crucial meet for me and I am glad that I won here as it put me in the right frame of mind," said a satisfied Aparna. The technically sound Aparna kept intact her unbeaten streak against B. R. Meenakshi and won 11-5, 11-4, but the tie had its share of exciting moments. Though Aparna was superior, she had a testing time whenever Meenakshi stepped up the pace, caught her napping on the low backhand. But Meenakshi couldn't pull that stuff off too often. "It was difficult to do that every time, the jump and smash routine can be a taxing effort. I was physically drained in this match as I figured in three finals here. It wasn't too wise a decision to play doubles and mixed doubles along with singles. I should avoid overtaxing myself," said Meenakshi. Aparna, though trailing 1-5 in the first game, quickly sized up the situation and came up with a brilliant all-court display to end Meenakshi's challenge. In the semi-finals, both Aparna and Meenakshi had tough times against their Thai rivals. Aparna was run close in both the games by an attacking Nucharin, but the Indian ace found her game midstream and opened up with her blistering strokes to subdue her rival 11-5, 11-8. Meenakshi, on the other hand, came back from the brink. The 22-year-old Indian battled her way past the determined 17-year-old Thai girl and third seed Salakjit Polsana. The Thai youngster has a good range of strokes, is quick on her feet and quite in contrast to her Indian rival showed better temperament. But what she lacked was experience. She was unable to finish when riding high. This inability was fully exploited by Meenakshi, whose forte is speed. As the Thai slowed near the finish line, the Indian girl quickly wove a web around her, pushing her on the defensive when it mattered the most. Meenakshi won 13-11, 5-11, 11-9. Polsana, however, had the consolation of winning the women's doubles title, partnering Nucharin. The Thai duo beat the scratch Indian combination of Meenakshi and Oli Deka at 15-4, 15-5. One is bound to hear of Polsana more, the game is in her blood, being the younger sister of Thai men's No. 1 and World No. 28 Boonsak. In the early rounds, the contests in the women's singles section went on predictable pattern. There were couple of disappointments though, with the former champion Lakshmi losing in the quarter-finals (to Meenakshi) and Neelima Choudhry, who had been out of action for a while, crashing out in the qualifying round itself, losing to Karnataka girl Shalini Prakash. The fourth seed Divya Ramesh, who was in the eye of a storm after suing BAI for not selecting her for the World championship squad a few months ago, failed to take the court on medical grounds. On the eve of the main draw events, she developed fever. The championship also offered the fans a view of some world class action in doubles. This is one area where the Indians still continue to struggle. The Indian challenge ended in the semi-finals and it was the young Malaysian duo, Rosman Razak and Ng Kean Kok, who bagged the title, beating the Thai combination of Kitipon Kitkul and Sudket Prapakamol 11-15, 15-13, 15-2 in an entertaining final. The National junior champion G. Jwala, who lost in the women's singles quarter-finals to Polsana, was on the winning side in the mixed doubles. In an all-Indian final, G. Jwala and Vidhyadhar defeated B. R. Meenakshi and Sandesh Choutha 15-10, 11-15, 15-9. The results (all finals, Indians unless specified): Men's singles: Chetan Anand bt Allan Tai (Mal) 15-11, 15-7. Women's singles: Aparna Popat bt B. R. Meenakshi 11-5,11-4. Men's doubles: Rosman Razak / Ng Kean Kok (Mal) bt Kitipon Kitkul / Sudket Prapakamol (Tha) 11-15, 15-13, 15-2. Women's doubles: Salakjit Polsana / T. Nucharin (Tha) bt B. R. Meenakshi / Oli Deka 15-4, 15-5. Mixed doubles: G. Jwala / Vidhyadhar bt B. R. Meenakshi / Sandesh Choutha 15-10, 11-15, 15-9. Semi-finals: Men's singles: Chetan Anand bt Nikhil Kanetkar 15-9, 8-15, 15-6; Allan Tai bt Anupap Thirartsakul (Tha) 17-14, 15-8. Women's singles: Aparna Popat bt T. Nucharin (Tha) 11-5, 11-8; B. R. Meenakshi bt Salakjit Polsana (Tha) 13-11, 5-11, 11-9. Men's doubles: Kitipon Kitkul / Sudket Prapakamol bt Roopesh Kumar / Arvind Bhat 15-7, 15-5; Rosman Razak / Ng Kean Kok bt Markose Bristow/ Vijaydeep Singh 15-7, 15-3. Women's doubles: Salakjit Polsana/ T. Nucharin (Tha) bt G. Jwala/ Shruti Kurien 13-15, 15-8, 15-3; B. R. Meenakshi/ Oli Dekka bt Li Wing Mui/ Siu Ching Man (HK) 17-14, 15-4. Mixed doubles: G. Jwala/ Vidhyadhar bt Su Ching Man / Lok Tin Tam (HK) 15-6, 15-11; B. R. Meenakshi /Sandesh Choutha bt Trupti Murgande / Jaseel P. Ismail 15-13, 6-15, 15-9.
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