Indians, Kashyap Parupalli and Ajay Jayaram (home page), scored
thrilling victories over higher-ranked opponents in opening-round Men’s
Singles matches at the Yonex Sunrise Hong Kong Open today.
While No. 23 Parupalli edged past No. 10 Jan O Jorgensen in one of the
closest matches of the year, 24-22 20-22 22-20, Jayaram held off recent
China Open finalist, Wang Zhengming of China, 22-20 23-21. Jayaram saved
two game points in the second game to squeeze past Wang.
The latter exited the tournament
along with compatriots Chen Jin (3), Chen Yuekun, Du Pengyu; Chen Jin
being surprised in straight games by Germany’s Marc Zwiebler (21-14
21-14). China’s three losses in Men’s Singles means all their hopes are
now on Chen Long (2) in that category. Indonesia’s Taufik Hidayat also
bowed out, though stretching young Japanese Takuma Ueda to three games.
“I
know Taufik is near the end of his career, so this was my chance to
beat him,” said 23-year-old Ueda who prevailed 19-21 23-21 21-16.
“I was nervous initially but, after Taufik won the first game, I calmed down and played better.”
Parupalli’s match against Jorgensen of Denmark was the day’s standout
result. Jorgensen saved four game points in the opening game which
Parupalli took 24-22. The Dane then held off a fightback from the Indian
in the second, as Parupalli levelled an 18-20 deficit, but could not
prevent Jorgensen from clinching it at 22-20. The pattern reversed in
the decider, with Jorgensen fighting back from 15-19 to holding match
point at 20-19, but Parupalli held firm to grab the next three points.
In Women’s Singles, the highest-profile loser was seventh seed Jiang Yanjiao of China, beaten by experienced
Japanese Eriko Hirose in a close match, 19-21 22-20 21-18. Another
three-game encounter saw veteran China-born Dutchwoman, Yao Jie (left),
calling time on her career. The former European champion lost a gritty
match to Thailand’s Busanan Ongbumrungpan, 21-8 20-22 21-19, and
promptly announced her retirement.
It was not a happy campaign for Hong Kong players in their home
Superseries. World No. 14 Hu Yun was the only winner out of seven
singles competitors. Apart from Hu, the others – including Ng Ka Long,
Wong Wing Ki and Chan Yan Kit in Men’s Singles, and Yip Pui Yin and Chan
Tsz Ka in Women’s Singles – were first-round casualties. The scene was
not any better in doubles. Five pairs in Women’s Doubles, including Poon
Lok Yan and Tse Ying Suet (right), and one in
Mixed Doubles were eliminated. Hu held off a late charge from world No.
6 Du Pengyu of China, 21-17 22-20 and will take on Abdul Latif of
Malaysia next. Wong Wing Ki, who said he was looking forward to playing
in the grand Hong Kong Coliseum for the second time, was beaten in three
games by Indonesia’s Tommy Sugiarto.
“This
is my sixth Hong Kong Open,” Wong said before the match. “Earlier, the
hall was much smaller. I like it here because of the atmosphere, and my
friends will be cheering for me.”
Meanwhile, both the top two seeds – Lee Chong Wei (Malaysia) and Chen
Long (China) – progressed into the next round easily. In the Men’s
Doubles, the prominent upset was that of fourth seeds Bodin
Issara/Maneepong Jongjit, beaten 21-18 21-10 by Lee Sheng Mu/Tsai Chia
Hsin of Chinese Taipei.
Double Olympic gold medallist, Zhao Yunlei of China, advanced to the
second round in both Women’s and Mixed Doubles with her respective
partners – Tian Qing and Zhang Nan (left, with Zhao).
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