Asian Games: HS Prannoy Gets Bronze, India's First Men's Singles Medal Since 1982 in Badminton
Asian Games: HS Prannoy Gets Bronze, India's First Men's Singles Medal Since 1982 in Badminton
HS Prannoy got bronze after losing to LI Shi Feng of China 16-21, 9-21 in the badminton men’s singles semi-final at the Asian Games.

India’s no. 1 men’s shuttler HS Prannoy on Friday clinched bronze after losing to LI Shi Feng of China 16-21, 9-21 in the men’s singles in the semifinals at the 19th Asian Games.

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Prannoy was also part of the silver medal-winning Indian men’s team last week.

The 31-year-old from Thiruvananthapuram made a good start but lost the plot midway through the opening game, mainly due to the errors he committed while looking for precision in his return, going wide and long in the process.

Prannoy focussed on constructing his rallies, using his drops to good use to lead 3-1. He mixed his shots well, shying away from smashes and instead using tosses to pin his opponent to the baseline.

Li tried to step up the pace and drew parity 5-5. The Indian then used his smash to get a point and soon moved to 8-5. He produced a forehand deceptive return to go to 9-7.

However, looking for precision, Prannoy missed the lines on the flank a few times to allow the Chinese to recover. Li made it 10-10 before a deceptive drop gave Prannoy a one-point cushion.

He led 13-11 when things started turning, as Li made it 15-14 with Prannoy erring.

The Chinese also grew in confidence and used his attack to move to 17-14. A straight jump smash kept Prannoy going, but he soon fell behind to 15-19.

Li won a net duel to gain four game points and then a lucky net cord ended the opening game.

The second game too was a tight affair initially as the duo battled to 4-4 but Li used his attacking returns and started dominating the rallies to eke out a four-point advantage at 8-4 with a net kill. Li had a five-point lead at the interval.

With Prannoy finding it hard to curb his errors, points kept coming thick and fast for Li as he moved to 14-6. The Chinese looked more sharp and showed better anticipation to move to 19-9 in a jiffy.

An on-the-line return gave 11 match points to Li and he sealed it comfortably.

The 31-year-old registered a 21-16, 21-23, 22-20 against Malaysia’s Lee Zii Jia in the quarters on Thursday to secure a semifinal berth and assured India’s first medal in men’s singles after Syed Modi’s bronze medal in 1982.

(With inputs from Agencies)

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