Korea Masters, Kidambi Srikanth, Sameer Verma, Hong Kong Open, BWF World Tour Super 300, english news website, The Federal
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The sixth seed, who has slipped to world No 11 in the BWF ranking, had never faced Tsuneyama before but the Indian made a good start, opening up a 5-1 lead. Photo: Twitter

Srikanth, Sameer bow out of Korea Masters, end Indian campaign

Shuttlers Kidambi Srikanth and Sameer Verma crashed out in straight-game losses in the second round of men's singles event to close curtains on India's campaign at the Korea Masters in Gwangju on Thursday (November 21).


Shuttlers Kidambi Srikanth and Sameer Verma crashed out in straight-game losses in the second round of men’s singles event to close curtains on India’s campaign at the Korea Masters in Gwangju on Thursday (November 21).

Srikanth, who achieved a semifinal finish at Hong Kong Open last week, exited the BWF World Tour Super 300 tournament with a 14-21 19-21 loss to Japan’s world No 14 Kanta Tsuneyama.

The sixth seed, who has slipped to world No 11 in the BWF ranking, had never faced Tsuneyama before but the Indian made a good start, opening up a 5-1 lead.

The Japanese then came up with four points to level par. Srikanth managed to move to 10-8 but Tsuneyama jumped to a 14-10 lead with six straight points. The Japanese kept surging ahead to pocket the opening game comfortably.

In the second game, Tsuneyama rose to 8-5 lead before entering the interval with a 11-9 lead. The Japanese then made his way to 17-12 before Srikanth narrowed it down to 16-17 and then 19-20. However, Tsuneyama had the last laugh in the end.

Also read: Srikanth, Sameer progress in Korea Masters, Sourabh bows out

Sameer reached a similar fate after fighting for 40 minutes before suffering a 19-21 12-21 defeat to local shuttler Kim Donghun, who is currently ranked 112th in the world.

In another match, Sameer was 8-4 ahead in the opening game against Kim but the Korean turned the tables, reaching 10-9 before the Indian managed to held on to a 11-10 advantage at the break.

Sameer again clawed back the lead at 14-12 but Kim kept fighting and soon earned the bragging rights after claiming the opening game.

Kim grabbed a 6-3 lead early in the second game and despite a gallant fight by Sameer, the Korean broke off after the breather to keep moving ahead even as Sameer crumbled under pressure.

(With inputs from agencies)

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