Tokyo: HS Prannoy stunned second seed Kento Momota in straight games to record a sensational win while reigning Commonwealth Games champion Lakshya Sen also sailed into the men's singles pre-quarterfinals of the World Championships here on Wednesday.
Unseeded Prannoy rose above expectations to shut the door on crowd favourite and two-time former world champion Momota 21-17 21-16 in a second round tie. Incidentally, it was Prannoy's first win over Momota in eight matches. In their previous clashes, the Indian won only one game against his higher-rated Japanese rival.
Earlier in he day, reigning Commonwealth Games champion Lakshya Sen sailed into the pre-quarterfinals with a straight game win over Spain's Luis Penalver. The young Indian badminton ace Sen won his second round contest 21-17 21-10, taking 72 minutes to complete the formality.
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Prannoy and Sen will face each other in an all-Indian last 16 clash on Thursday. "The record has not been great with him. It is always tough to play against someone who has played at the highest level," Prannoy said after the match. "I had to be really disciplined against him today. I think it was really important to pace the game really well, which game to push and which is okay to lose. So in that way, strategy wise I was correct today."
"He is not at his best. But a win is a win. And playing one more round is great. I have been working on my mental side. I have been trying to be as calm as possible. A lot of matches I'm in much better control and I'm not really thinking about what my opponent is playing. But I think there is still a lot of room for improvement," Prannoy, the hero of India's Thomas Cup triumph added.
Last edition's runner-up Kidambi Srikanth crashed out of after a straight game defeat to world number 32 Zhao Jun Peng. Srikanth went down against his Chinese counterpart 18-21, 17-21 in a match lasting only 34 minutes. The 29-year-old was out of sorts in the opening game as it took only 12 minutes for Zhao to take a 1-0 lead in the match. The Indian, already on the back foot, tried to up the ante in the second game and led 16-14 but too many unforced errors helped Zhao secure the victory.