This Article is From Oct 14, 2010

CWG: Saina clinches gold after thrilling win

CWG: Saina clinches gold after thrilling win
New Delhi: It was fitting that Golden girl Saina Nehwal got the 38th Gold that established India firmly at No 2 on the medals tally at the Delhi Commonwealth Games.

Australia was home in style as numero uno already. But the real battle was being fought just behind them for the Number 2 slot on the tally. As Saina Nehwal began her women's singles final against Malaysian Mew Choo Wong, it was India 37 Golds, England 37 Golds. And England ahead because they had more Silvers.  

So Saina went in knowing she had only one option - win Gold. She lost the first game, but never looked back thereafter. In the final game, Mew could only look on as Saina piled up the points, holding seven match points eventually. Mew could save but one, before Saina ended the match and all of India exhaled.

World number three Saina bounced back from a game down to battle past Wong 19-21 23-21 21-13 in a nerve-wrecking 70-minute title clash in the women's singles amid the continuous cheering from the vociferous crowd at the Siri Fort Sports Complex.

Aparna Popat won a silver in women's singles at Kuala Lumpur Commonwealth Games in 1998, while Prakash Padukone was the first Indian to win a gold at the 1978 Edmonton edition, followed by Syed Modi, the last shuttler to win a gold in the quadrennial event in 1982 Brisbane Games.

In the first game, Saina found it difficult to judge the shuttle and lost few points at the forecourt and nets to see the game slip out of her hands after she trailed 8-11 at the break.

But the Indian came back strongly in the second. Saina started playing more cross shots and kept pushing the shuttle at the back in the long rallies to come back from a 0-2 deficit to lead 14-10.

But Wong narrowed the gap and wrested the lead at 21-10 before the Indian closed the game with two more points to roar back into the contest.

In the decider, Saina employed a similar strategy and kept her rival away from the nets and used her deceptive drops and tosses to lead 11-7. She consolidated on her lead as Wong's game crumbled.

The Malaysian kept hitting the shuttle out of the court and hit the nets in the final point as Saina burst into tears and run into her mentor Pullela Gopichand's arms.
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