Jennifer fights hard for the under-15 title
The Hindu
The Maharashtra player appeared to choke and allowed fourth-seed Avisha a toe-hold in the final before prevailing; Riana Bhoota breezes away with under-13 title beating Ahona Ray; boys’ Nationals gets underway on Friday
The 14-year-old 10th seed from Nagpur, whose roots are in Thiruvalla in Kerala, pulled off a 4-3 victory over Delhi’s fourth-seeded Avisha Karmakar for her trophy. Meanwhile, Maharashtra’s Riana Bhoota took the under-13 girls’ title with a breezy 4-0 victory over West Bengal’s Ahona Ray.
Jennifer is tall and immensely talented but she appeared to choke and the opening game exposed it fully. Despite being on game point a few times, she allowed Avisha to come back and trouble her each time before winning the opener on her seventh game point.
“I was choking a lot because I was only thinking about winning and not playing,” Jennifer told The Hindu. “But in the end, in the decider, I just focused on my quality and tried to get better. That’s how I managed to win.”
Jennifer’s previous National title had come in 2019 and she desperately wanted to win.
But Avisha proved to be a tough nut to crack.
The battle between the two attacking players was a thriller. Avisha’s strategy was to use the push to stop Jennifer from unleashing her attacking guns, her forehand and backhand topspinners. But it did not work for long. There were plenty of fast rallies too with both the players waiting for the other to commit mistakes.
And Jennifer came up with a nice variety, mixing up her shots and attacking the flanks smartly to pull off a memorable victory.