Sumit Nagal’s late flourish gave one thing to cheer to the followers on an in any other case forgettable day for the Indian contingent on the Chennai Open Challenger on Tuesday.
Nagal, persevering with his purple patch, received 6-4, 6-4 in opposition to Great Britain’s Ryan Peniston, the fourth seed, and superior to the second spherical.
Nagal bought an early break within the first set however allowed Peniston to drag sq. within the fifth recreation. Two forehand winners and a fortunate internet level within the very subsequent recreation put Nagal a break forward once more.
For the second time, the Indian handed the benefit again and was damaged by Peniston, as a crosscourt again hand put up a protracted rally that had ensued on a break level settled the sport.
It took three unforced errors from Peniston, who was serving to save lots of the set and trailing 4-5, for Nagal to bag the primary set.
Fighting an early deficit within the second iteration, Nagal broke and drew degree within the fourth recreation, with an on-the-run forehand winner down the road being the spotlight.
Two put-aways on the internet helped Nagal inch 3-2 forward. The set was advancing on serve till two break factors for the Indian within the eighth recreation appeared to nudge him inside touching distance of a win.
However, he squandered them and one other one after deuce as Peniston stayed within the hunt at 4 video games apiece.
Nagal discovered the breakthrough within the tenth recreation with two forehands on the rise to beat his opponent on the baseline. Unrelenting defence by the Indian on the deciding level pressured Peniston’s shot broad to seal the set 6-4.
Earlier within the day, Prajnesh Gunneswaran, Mukund Sasikumar and Ramkumar Ramanathan misplaced their opening spherical matches.
Prajnesh, with highly effective serving and aggressive method on the internet, received the primary set 6-4 in opposition to Jay Clarke.
The Brit, nevertheless, levelled the rating by clinching the second set with a 6-3 scoreline. The decider stretched to a tie-break the place a fall at 4-4 proved expensive for Prajnesh, who was already combating a discomforted ankle. The Indian couldn’t win a single level after that, dropping the set 7-6(4) and match.
Ramanathan, after conceding the primary set 3-6 to Bulgaria’s Dimitar Kuzmanov, pressured the second right into a tie-break. However, a double fault with the breaker nonetheless at serve proved expensive. Kuzmanov prevailed 7-6(3) and received the competition.
Sasikumar crashed out with a 2-6, 2-6 defeat to Australia’s Max Purcell.
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com