Gold Coast: Manika Batra inspired India to a historic gold medal with her stunning singles victories, fashioning an unthinkable 3-1 victory over four-time gold medallists Singapore in the final of the women’s team event at the Commonwealth Games here on Sunday.
World No 58 Manika first scored the biggest win of her career by humbling World No 4 and multiple Olympic medallist Feng Tianwei 3-2 before brushing aside 100th-ranked Yihan Zhou 3-0 to engineer a sensational win over the mighty Singapore side.
It was the mother of all upsets as prior to this final, the Singapore women’s team had never lost in the Commonwealth Games since the sport was inducted into the programme way back in 2002.
“Even in my wildest dream I had not thought that I will beat an Olympic medallist and world number four,” Batra said after her shock win over Feng Tianwei.
“I knew that she was having problems with my pimpled rubber and I realise that but I did not use it as my strength all the time. I kept changing my game. I did not want to kept her settle so I changed my rubber after the second game,” she added.
“It was my first time playing against Feng, the moment I knew I won against the world number four, I felt on top of the world.”
The victory tasted even sweeter as the women had returned empty handed from the Glasgow edition four years ago. It was only the second table tennis team gold for India at the Games with the men achieving the feat in the 2006 Melbourne edition. Earlier on Sunday, India had blanked England 3-0 to reach the women’s team final for the second time.
While Manika was the architect of India’s historic win against Singapore, the experienced pairing of Madhurika Patkar and Mouma Das played the supporting role to perfection by winning the crucial doubles tie 3-1 (11-7, 11-6, 8-11, 11-7) against Zhou and Mengyu Yu for a 2-1 lead in the final.
After Manika shocked Feng 3-2 (11-8, 8-11, 7-11, 11-9, 11-7) in the opening singles, Mengyu had equalised for Singapore with a 13-11, 11-2, 11-6 win over Madhurika.
Manika then proved too good for Yihan, who failed to read her deceptive strokes. The Singaporean put a back hand long as the Indian completed a 11-7, 11-4, 11-7, leading to wild celebrations.
Batra’s childhood coach Sandeep Gupta said,”She always had the game to upset top players and she has done it again. It is time we get over the mentality that pimpled players cannot survive at the highest level.”
“You just need to have an attacking game with the defence of the pimpled rubber. Her strength is that she can change gears from defense to counter attack very fast,” said Gupta.