Sports
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Indian Shuttlers Aim for Breakthrough at Indonesia Masters
Times of India
January 19, 2026•3 days ago
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Indian shuttlers aim for improved performance at the Indonesia Masters following a disappointing home run. Lakshya Sen, HS Prannoy, Kidambi Srikanth, and PV Sindhu face challenging draws against higher-ranked opponents. The tournament presents an opportunity for redemption and a strong start to their season against a demanding field.
Lakshya Sen (ANI Photo)
JAKARTA: Indian shuttlers would eye a drastic improvement after last week's disappointing home run when they go up against a demanding draw at the USD 500,000 Indonesia Masters, which gets underway here on Tuesday. At the India Open in New Delhi last week, Lakshya Sen bowed out in the men's singles quarterfinals, while no Indian progressed beyond the last eight in any category as Chinese Taipei's Lin Chun-Yi and world number one An Se Young of Korea clinched the men's and women's singles titles respectively.
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The focus now shifts to Jakarta, where Indian shuttlers will face a challenging line-up in the opening rounds with several tough ties against higher-ranked opponents. Seventh seed Lakshya, who won the Australia Open last year, will be hurting after his run at India Open was cut short by Lin in the last eight stage. He will look to make a good start when he opens his campaign against Singapore's Jia Heng Jason Teh, while HS Prannoy faces a stern test against Malaysia's former world No. 2 and Paris Olympics bronze-medallist Lee Zii Jia. Former world No. 1 Kidambi Srikanth, who reached the finals at Malaysia Masters and Syed Modi International last year, will take on Japan's Koki Watanabe, while Tharun Mannepalli is drawn against Yushi Tanaka of Japan. US Open champion Ayush Shetty has been handed a tough draw against third seed Jonatan Christie of Indonesia, who reached the finals at India Open. After a disappointing first-round exit at India Open, it will yet another tough outing for the 20-year-old. In women's singles, fifth seed PV Sindhu, who started the season after recovering from a foot injury, will begin her campaign against Japan's Manami Suizu. World No. 12 Sindhu endured a first-round exit at India Open after going down to Vietnam's World No. 23 Nguyen Thuy Linh. The young and promising Tanvi Sharma, a junior world Championships silver-medallist, is drawn against fourth seed Tomoka Miyazaki of Japan. Sharma had produced a fearless show last week, coming close to beating Tokyo Olympics champion Chen Yu Fei before falling short in a three-game thriller. Teenager Unnati Hooda would hope to be up for the challenge when she faces top seed Chen Yufei in her opening round, while Malvika Bansod will fight it out against sixth seed Michelle Li of Canada. India will also have representation in the men's doubles qualification, with Hariharan Amsakarunan and MR Arjun competing in the fourth qualifying round.
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