PV Sindhu crashes out of the BWF Malaysia Open 2026
She lost to China's Wang Zhiyi in straight games
No Indians left in the tournament
PV Sindhu crashes out of the BWF Malaysia Open 2026
She lost to China's Wang Zhiyi in straight games
No Indians left in the tournament
Ace Indian shuttler P V Sindhu's impressive run came to an end after a straight-game defeat to China's Wang Zhiyi in the women's singles semifinals of the season-opening Malaysia Open Super 1000 here on Saturday.
The two-time Olympic medallist could not sustain the pressure against the world number two, committing too many unforced errors in a 16-21, 15-21 loss.
Playing her first tournament after recovering from a foot injury that kept her on the sidelines since October last year, Sindhu also let slip an 11-6 lead in the second game.
The loss also brought down curtains on India's campaign in the tournament.
Sindhu took the fight to her higher-ranked opponent early, hitting hard and using her reach effectively.
She produced her trademark cross-court smashes to race to a 5-2 lead before Wang's subtle touch helped her draw level with a run of points.
A few misses from Wang allowed Sindhu to edge ahead 9-7 but the Chinese player clawed back once again to take a slender one-point lead at the interval as Sindhu faltered at the net.
Both players struggled for length after the restart with the scores locked at 13-13 and several points squandered at the backline.
From 15-14, Wang upped the pressure with relentless attacking shots that cramped Sindhu, mixing them with well-judged lifts that floated just beyond reach.
She surged to 18-14, conceded one point in a fierce rally, then earned four game points and closed out the opener as Sindhu went wide.
The second game saw Sindhu slip to 1-3 after two unforced errors but she regrouped quickly, constructing rallies with authority to move ahead 6-3.
Wang steadied herself to narrow the gap, yet Sindhu dominated the mid-phase by pushing her opponent to the corners with sharp angles, opening up an 11-6 lead at the break.
Wang came out firing after the resumption, engaging in brisk rallies but Sindhu countered with near-perfect net shots to stay ahead at 13-9.
Once again, Wang fought back as Sindhu sprayed shots wide and into the net, drawing level at 13-13 before seizing the initiative.
A deft net exchange gave the Chinese player a 16-13 cushion.
Sindhu then missed the backline twice and a backhand net error handed Wang five match points.
The contest ended when Sindhu pushed another shot wide, sealing Wang's place in the final.