India shuttler Lakshya Sen misses out on bronze

Story by  ATV | Posted by  Sumana | Date 05-08-2024
India shuttler Lakshya Sen
India shuttler Lakshya Sen

 

New Delhi

India shuttler Lakshya Sen's remarkable campaign concluded on a disappointing note after he narrowly missed out on the bronze medal in the men's singles event at the ongoing Paris Olympics on Monday.

Lakshya Sen, just like many other India athletes, stood on the cusp of making history at the Paris Olympics. He was in contention for becoming the first Indian shuttler to win a medal in the men's singles event at the Olympics.

However, he came close but ended up too far from etching his name in the history books following his 21-13, 16-21, 11-21 loss against Malaysia's Zii Jia Lee and finished fourth in the event.

With Jia on the service and Sen on the receiving end, an intense rally between the two shuttlers unfolded to begin the proceedings for the bronze medal match. The Malaysian shuttler hit it too long beyond the backline to allow the Lakshya to take the first set.

A nervy start from Jia forced another error from him, handing an early two-point lead to Lakshya. He misjudged the landing spot of the shuttle, making the scoreline 2-1.

Lakshay regained a two-point lead after Jia's return went wide at 4-2. Lakshya took three consecutive points after the Malaysian continued to misplace his shots.

Jia reduced the deficit to three with a cross-court smash to make the scoreline 7-4. Once again, a couple of errors from Jia continued to haunt him and widened the gap, making the scoreline 10-4.

Lakshya, who showcased his prowess with his flawless defence, bombarded fierce smashes to extend his lead to 11-6.

Lakshya continued to exercise control in the opening set with the versatility of his shots and sealed the first set with a 21-13 win.

With the seventh-seeded Malaysian shuttler eyeing a comeback in the second set, Lakshya didn't give him much room to shift the momentum.

He raced to an 8-3 lead, but Jia restored the parity with five consecutive points. Jia took eight consecutive points to lead by three points at the half-time break.

Lakshya broke Jia's streak of points with a ferocious smash, and he followed it up with another cross-court smash to unsettle Jia.

He chased down the lead, making the scoreline 12-12. Jia once again restored a slender lead, but Laksya didn't allow the Malaysian to extend his lead with powerful in-line body smashes.

Lakshya tried to close the gap, but the Malaysian held his nerves to maintain the gap and level the scoreline at 1-1 with a 16-21 win in the second set.

In the bronze medal decider, Lakshya was outplayed by Jia's forehand, backhand and relentless smashes.

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Jia raced to a 2-9 lead by executing gobsmacking smashes. Lakshya managed to reduce the gap by 6-11 before the mid-break. Eventually, he never recovered from the deficit and lost the third set and the bronze medal by 11-21.