Thursday, December 12, 2024
spot_img

Manika continues to impress, advances to third round

Date:

Share post:

spot_img
spot_img

TOKYO, July 25: India’s table tennis star Manika Batra made a stunning comeback against world number 32 Margaryta Pesotska to reach the women’s singles third round but G Sathiyan succumbed to the pressure on his Olympic debut to exit the men’s singles competition here on Sunday.
While the 26th seed Sathian was expected to beat world number 94 Hong Kong’s Siu Hang Lam in his second round match after getting a first round bye, the same cannot be said about Manika, whose gritty approach under pressure proved decisive against her higher-ranked opponent from Ukraine.
Manika, ranked 62, made a remarkable comeback after losing the first two games to prevail 4-11, 4-11, 11-7, 12-10, 8-11, 11-5, 11-7 in a second round match that lasted 57 minutes. She meets Austria’s Sofia Polcanova on Monday for a place in the round of 16.
If Manika manages another upset, it will be a significant achievement for the Indian in her second Olympics.
Down and out after the first two games and trailing even in the third, Manika somehow clawed her way back into the match.
She used the pimple rubber to good effect thereafter and combined it with a more offensive approach.
The match saw long rallies, slow as well as fast ones, as Manika twiddled with her bat amazingly to find forehand and backhand winners. The sixth game which she won after trailing 2-5 turned the tide in her favour decisively.
The timeout worked as she reeled off nine points in a row to give herself five game points before levelling the match at 3-3.
With momentum in her side, Manika controlled the deciding game and sealed the match with a forehand cross court winner.
Earlier, world number 38 Sathiyan had a commanding 3-1 lead but lost four games in a row to lose 3-4 to lower-ranked Lam from Hong Kong.
“It is heartbreaking but I will come back stronger. I was playing really well initially. I was aggressive and serving well but after the fourth game he started to slow down the pace and started receiving better,” Sathian said after the match.
“The rallies got longer and I started to feel the pressure. I was a little bit passive from the fifth game onwards. I should have continued being aggressive despite his variation in pace. I just made the error of playing it safe.
“Credit to him also. He did not make much mistakes in the last two games,” Sathiyan added. (PTI)

spot_img
spot_img

Related articles

Turkey fines Meta over child privacy breach

Ankara, Dec 11: Turkey's data protection authority, the Personal Data Protection Authority (KVKK), has fined Meta, the parent...

India’s renewable energy capacity logs 14.2 pc growth at 213.7 GW

New Delhi, Dec 11: India’s total non-fossil fuel installed capacity reached 213.70 GW in November, marking an impressive...

India poised to become leading maritime player: PM Modi

New Delhi, Dec 11: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday highlighted that with a strategic location in the...

Syrian militants lift curfew in Damascus, urge residents to return to work

Damascus, Dec 11:  Syria's Military Operations Administration announced Wednesday that it has lifted the curfew previously imposed on...