Anahat fights her way into semifinals
The Hindu
Rallies brilliantly from two games down to defeat Tanvi
The small gathering at the Indian Squash and Triathlon Academy here on Thursday was treated to some delightful squash as 14-year-old Anahat Singh turned around a two-game deficit to defeat Tanvi Khanna 9-11, 6-11, 11-5, 11-3, 11-8 to enter the semifinals of the HCL-78th Senior National championships here on Thursday.
Anahat will take on giant-killer Tanishka Jain of Maharashtra. Tanishka upset Statemate Urwashi Joshi (seeded 3/4) in the last eight. Tanishka had earlier put it across Sanika Choudhari (seeded 5/8) in the pre-quarterfinals.
The match of the day was the one involving players from Delhi — Anahat and Tanvi. The 26-year-old qualifier was flawless in the first two games, pushing Anahat to the corners and making the teenager run around. Anahat, however, gained in confidence as she retrieved well and raised her game to a brilliant combination of offence and defence both from the frontcourt and backcourt. Tanvi found herself at the receiving end in the next three games.
In a men’s quarterfinal, former champion Harinderpal Singh defeated second-seeded S. Navaneeth Prabhu 11-7, 11-6, 11-1. Harinder will next take on S. Velavan, who put it across Veer Chotrani 11-2, 11-1, 11-9.
Semifinal line-up: Men: Abhay Singh vs Sandeep Jangra; Velavan vs Harinder; Women: Joshna Chinappa vs Akansha Salunkhe; Anahat vs Tanishka.
The results (quarterfinals):
Men: Abhay Singh (TN) bt Suraj Chand (Mah) 11-3, 11-4, 11-6; Sandeep Jangra (SSCB) bt Vijay Kumar (SSCB) 11-9, 8-11, 11-9, 11-9; S. Velavan (TN) bt Veer Chotrani (Mah) 11-2, 11-1, 11-9; Harinderpal Singh (TN) bt Navaneeth Prabhu (TN) 11-7, 11-6, 11-1.
He has worn India’s blues, albeit in an Under-19 World Cup, with K.L. Rahul, Mayank Agarwal, Harshal Patel and Jaydev Unadkat as his teammates. He has proudly adorned the Lion’s Crest — the famed Mumbai cricket logo — in all three formats. He has played with Yuvraj Singh, against Virat Kohli and Rahul Dravid and has the likes of Rahul and Joe Root in his illustrious list of dismissals. He is also a software developer for an IT giant, based in California. Virtually every middle-class Indian over the last three decades at some stage dreams of being either a cricketer or an IT professional. Saurabh Netravalkar has been combining two dreams, even after relocating to USA to pursue academics at the prestigious Cornell University in 2015.