Sun, 21 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jun 20, 2026 · 19:25
Sports India News Updated Jun 20, 2026

Ashmita Chaliha Bows Out in Macau Open Semifinals; India's Campaign Ends

Ashmita Chaliha's impressive run at the Macau Open Super 300 ended with a straight-games semifinal defeat to South Korea's Park Ga Eun. The Indian shuttler led 15-11 in the first game but lost 10 of the next 11 points to concede it. She struggled in the second game as Park sealed a 21-17, 21-9 victory in 38 minutes. India's campaign concluded with the loss, following earlier exits by Anmol Kharb, Tharun Mannepalli, and Rounak Chouhan.

Macau Open 2026: Ashmita Chaliha bows out in semis as India's campaign comes to a close

Macau, June 20

India's hopes at the Macau Open Super 300 came to an end on Saturday after Ashmita Chaliha suffered a straight-games defeat to South Korea's Park Ga Eun in the women's singles semifinals.

Park booked her place in the title clash with a 21-17, 21-9 victory in just 38 minutes, ending Ashmita's impressive run at the tournament and bringing India's campaign to a close.

The Indian shuttler looked well on course to claim the opening game after racing to a 15-11 advantage. However, Park produced a remarkable turnaround, winning 10 of the next 11 points to snatch the game and seize control of the contest. Ashmita struggled to regain momentum in the second game as the Korean maintained her dominance to wrap up the match in straight games.

Ashmita had entered the last-four clash on the back of a confident quarter-final performance against another Korean, Kim Min Sun. She prevailed 21-16, 21-18, overturning a six-point deficit in the second game with a brilliant late surge that saw her reel off five consecutive points to seal victory.

The semifinal marked another encouraging performance for the left-hander, who has steadily rebuilt her form after missing nearly three months of action earlier this year because of injury. Before arriving in Macau, she had already reached the quarter-finals at both the China Masters and Malaysia Masters, underlining her consistency on the BWF World Tour.

India's challenge in the women's singles had already taken a hit on Friday when eighth seed Anmol Kharb exited in the quarter-finals. The youngster lost 14-21, 21-15, 21-13 to China's fourth seed Han Qian Xi despite taking the match into a decider.

The men's singles campaign had ended even earlier, with qualifiers Tharun Mannepalli and Rounak Chouhan bowing out in the pre-quarterfinals. India's doubles representatives were also eliminated at the same stage.

The Indian contingent will now shift its focus to the US Open, the next stop on the BWF World Tour calendar, which begins on June 23.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sneha F

Honestly, 21-9 in the second game is a bit concerning. She needs to work on her stamina and mental strength after losing the first game. Hope she learns from this.\n\nBut yes, reaching semis at a Super 300 is no small feat. 👏

Rohit P

Baap re, what a comeback from Park! Ashmita was 15-11 up and then lost 10 of the next 11 points. That's like a dagger through the heart. But she's still young and coming back from injury, so let's support her. US Open next, fingers crossed! 🤞

Kavya N

It's disappointing that our men's singles campaign ended so early - Tharun and Rounak are talented but they need more exposure at higher levels. And Ashmita should have closed out that first game.\n\nAnyway, she's shown consistency with quarter-finals at China Masters and Malaysia Masters. Rome wasn't built in a day. Onwards and upwards! 🏸

James A

Tough loss for India. Ashmita has potential but needs to tighten up her game in the crunch moments. That 15-11 lead vanishing in a blink is reminiscent of some of our other players. Still, semis is respectable. Good luck at the US Open!

Varun X

Ashmita is a left-handed player, which is always an advantage in badminton. She should use that more aggressively. Also, missing 3 months due to injury and still reaching semis? That's character. Our badminton depth is improving but we need more tournament experience.\n\nDisappointed that Anmol Kharb also lost though - young players need to learn to close out matches.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked