Lakshya Sen Fights Back to Reach India Open Quarters, Srikanth & Prannoy Fall

Lakshya Sen staged a remarkable comeback in the first game to defeat Japan's Kenta Nishimoto and advance to the quarterfinals of the India Open 2026. India's other top contenders, Kidambi Srikanth and HS Prannoy, were eliminated despite putting up strong fights in their respective matches. The women's singles challenge also concluded as Malvika Bansod lost to China's Han Yue. Sen will next face Lin Chun-Yi of Chinese Taipei for a spot in the semifinals.

Key Points: Lakshya Sen Advances to India Open 2026 Quarterfinals

  • Sen wins in straight games
  • Srikanth loses in three-set thriller
  • Prannoy falls to former world champion
  • India's women's singles challenge ends
3 min read

India Open 2026: Lakshya Sen beats Kenta Nishimoto in straight games to reach quarters

Lakshya Sen beats Kenta Nishimoto to reach India Open quarters. Kidambi Srikanth & HS Prannoy lose in second round despite strong efforts.

"I started lifting the shuttle longer and focused on defending well and I think that turned the first game. - Lakshya Sen"

New Delhi, January 15

Former champion Lakshya Sen relied on his strong defence and injection of pace to defeat Japan's Kenta Nishimoto while Kidambi Srikanth and HS Prannoy's inspired performances were not enough in the second round of the India Open 2026, a BWF World Tour Super 750 event being organised by the Badminton Association of India, at the Indira Gandhi Indoor Stadium here on Thursday, as per a release.

Sen packed off Nishimoto 21-19, 21-11 to advance to the quarterfinals after Srikanth had gone down 21-14, 17-21, 21-17 against BWF World Tour Finals winner Christo Popov of France, and Prannoy lost to eighth seed Loh Kean Yew of Singapore 18-21, 21-19, 21-14.

India's challenge in the women's singles also came to an end after Chinese fifth seed Han Yue accounted for Malvika Bansod 21-18, 21-15.

The going was tough even for Sen in the initial stages of the first game against Nishimoto as the Indian was struggling to find his rhythm and length of his strokes. The Indian Oil employee trailed the Japanese 11-16 in the opening game and then 14-18 but kept on engaging his opponent in long rallies and came up with some brilliant defensive strokes to parry Nishimoto's smashes to claw back.

He won five straight points to take the lead and then wrapped up the opening game on the very first opportunity.

Sen was much more clinical in the second game, varying his pace and going for the kill whenever he found an opportunity. As he grew in confidence, the 24-year-old mixed his half smashes with clever reserve drops to keep his opponent guessing and sealed his quarterfinal spot in 50 minutes.

"At the start of the opening game I was struggling with my rhythm a bit and was lifting short and that allowing him to attack more. But then I started lifting the shuttle longer and focused on defending well and I think that turned the first game," said Lakshya, as quoted from a release.

He will next face Chinese Taipei's Lin Chun-Yi, who defeated Nhat Nguyen of Ireland 21-16, 21-17.

"In the second game, I knew I could not give him the opportunity to keep playing his game and so mixed my speed and it worked," he added.

In the day's other matches, Prannoy won the opening game against Loh and saved three game points in the second to come close to an upset win. But once the former world champion forced a decider, he raised the tempo of the match and the Indian wasn't able to match the strategic chance of his opponent.

Earlier, Srikanth also gave glimpses of his attacking abilities against Popov but could not overcome the challenge of France's first World Tour Finals men's singles champion.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
A bit disappointed that Srikanth and Prannoy couldn't make it through, especially Prannoy was so close. But Lakshya is carrying the flag brilliantly. All the best for the quarters against Lin Chun-Yi!
V
Vikram M
The article rightly points out his clever use of half smashes and reverse drops. That's the tactical maturity we've been waiting for from him. He's not just a power player anymore. Good show!
S
Sarah B
Watching from the US. The level of badminton at this tournament is incredible. Sen's defensive retrieval in that first game rally at 16-11 was world class. Hope he goes all the way!
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Rohit P
Respectful criticism: I feel the article could have given a bit more analysis on why Prannoy and Srikanth lost. Was it fitness, strategy, or just a bad day? They are senior players, and their losses need deeper understanding for fans.
K
Kavya N
So proud of Lakshya! He's an employee of Indian Oil and still performing at this elite level. Juggling a job and sport at the highest level is no joke. True dedication. 💪

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