Hyderabad:Post 30, most of the shuttlers take retirement from badminton and consider some other professions, but Valiyaveetil Diju, popularly known as V Diju, doesn't belong to that league. At 40, he is still going strong and making waves in the senior nationals and unsure about his retirement plan.
After teaming up with 41-year-old South Asian Games gold medallist Rupesh Kumar, Diju, the five-time national mixed doubles champion, played three senior national ranking championships and made one semifinal and two quarterfinal appearances. The duo also made it to the final of the national senior championship but lost it.
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Diju is a pioneer of a sort in the circuit of Indian mixed doubles. He represented India in the 2012 London Olympics and was the first Indian mixed doubles player to take part in the Olympics along with his long time partner Jwala Gutta.
The Diju-Jwala pairing, in fact, the first Indian mixed doubles pair to win a Grand Prix title in Bitburger Open (now SaarLorLux Open) in 2008. That year in Europe, Diju and Jwala created quite a buzz following their outstanding performance in Germany with a title in the Bulgarian Open. However, their swansong ended in the Dutch Open, where they lost the semifinal.
After they clinched the Chinese Taipei Open Grand Prix Gold tournament, the Indian pair was regarded as one of the strongest contenders for the 2009 India Open held in Hyderabad. They had put up their best performance but lost to the Indonesian pair of Flandy Limpele and Vita Marissa in the final.
2008 and 2009 arguably the best seasons for the Diju and Jwala pair as they made it to yet another final in the World Superseries Masters in Malayasia, but lost the summit clash to Denmark's Joachim Fischer Nielsen and Christinna Pedersen.
When Diju and Jwala were playing, there were hardly any other notable mixed doubles pair in India. It doesn't only mean that they lacked competition at home but it also shows India's apathy towards mixed doubles.
How did they pair up?
Though it was Diju and Jwala's own decision to pair up to play mixed doubles, advice from Edwin Iriawan, an Indonesian doubles coach who worked with the Indian team from 2010 to the start of 2014, gave a boost to their endeavour. "Initially, it was our decision to play mixed doubles. Before mixed doubles, I was playing men's doubles. But Iriawan insisted that we should pair up. After that only we started playing mixed doubles. It worked out really well," Diju told ETV Bharat in an exclusive interview from his Kochi home.
Asked how it feels like being regarded as one of the pioneers of Indian mixed doubles, Diju said, "We started our partnership in 2007-2008 and we played till 2014. I think for those six-seven years we played really well. I feel our combination worked out pretty well. For us, it was the start of a journey, we didn't think much about this back then."
However, the former World No. 6 said mixed doubles as a discipline of badminton has not progressed much in India even today. "I feel doubles and mixed doubles are in a really better condition now. 10-11 years ago, there was nothing much. Only a few players used to play doubles and mixed doubles in India. Now it is in better condition as there are many doubles players coming up and putting up good performance in international tournaments. Mixed doubles is showing promise of late, but compared to doubles, it is still a discipline represented by a small group of players. But I think two pairs from India are playing really well. I think in the next two to three years we will get to see some results."
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Asked which mixed doubles pair of the country has impressed him the most in recent time, Diju said, "Satwik (Satwiksairaj Rankireddy) and Ashwini Ponappa are playing well. But Satwik is also playing men's doubles. I think playing both doubles and mixed doubles would be too difficult for him in the longer run. One more pair is Pranav Chopra and N Sikki Reddy. They are showing promise. I believe they will do well in near future."