PV Sindhu vs Saina Nehwal: Who is the queen of Indian badminton?

PV Sindhu and Saina Nehwal
 

Saina Nehwal

Every sport needs someone who could become a pioneer for the others to look up to. Padukone was once such personality who set that benchmark in 1980, and we saw the likes of Pullela Gopichand and Aparna Popat emerge out of his legacy.

For this present generation, that benchmark has been set by Saina Nehwal. In her decade long career the Hyderabadi has achieved as much as any Indian fan could have hoped for, making sure that badminton remains a widely-followed sport in the country.

Saina first burst on to the scene in 2006 but made a big impression in 2008, when she reached the quarterfinals at the Beijing Olympics. However, hers and Indian badminton’s crowning glory came at the London edition of the Games, four years later, when she became the first Indian shuttler to win a medal at an Olympics, clinching the bronze in front of a packed Wembley arena.

Unlike Sindhu, the medals at the World Championships eluded Saina for a while. She repeatedly fell in the Round 3 stage of the competition for several years, before eventually winning the silver medal last year, losing to Carolina Marin in the final.

2015 was an also a year when Saina became the first Indian women’s singles shuttler to reach the final at the All England Championships, and that led to her reaching the top of the world rankings.

Thanks to injuries that played a major part in her slight downslide in the past 12-15 months, Saina couldn’t replicate her showing from 2012 at the 2016 Rio Olympics, crashing out in the Group stage. One of the reasons for her loss was later revealed to be an injury that she had sustained just before leaving for Brazil.

Saina at the All England Championships. She won the silver over there

Saina is only 26 and has shown that at her best she can defeat any opponent who comes in her way. That ‘best’ is something that we perhaps need to wait for some time though, since earlier today morning (20th August), she underwent surgery to her right knee and hence could be out from the game for months.

But Saina surely is far from finished, and one can definitely expect another comeback from her in the weeks to come.

Saina in a nutshell

International debut: 2006

Bronze at the 2012 London Olympics

Runner-up at the 2015 All England Championships

Silver at the 2015 Jakarta World Championships

Sindhu’s and Saina’s best performances at all 3 events

CompetitionPV SindhuSaina Nehwal
OlympicsSilver medalist Women’s Singles Rio 2016Bronze medalist Women’s Singles London 2012
All England ChampionshipsRound 2 in 2014Silver medalist Women’s Singles in 2015
World ChampionshipsTwo-time Bronze medalist Women’s Singles in 2013 and 2014Silver medalist Women’s Singles in 2015

Conclusion: The above table indicates that both players have excelled on the world stage, but Saina, thanks to the All England final, is marginally ahead of Sindhu at the moment. But barring that, there is very little to separate the two in terms of their performance on the world stage.

Another thing to consider, and something that we haven’t touched upon in detail here, is rankings. Sindhu has reached as high as 9th during her career whereas Saina was number 1 last year for a brief period, which again puts the elder star at a higher pedestal.

But if Sindhu can continue to play the way she did at Rio, there’s no reason why she can’t climb the charts soon and perhaps emulate Saina by going top of the rankings. For now, however, it is celebration time for her as it is for the whole of India, who eagerly anticipate the return of the champion back home.

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