City
Epaper

Swiss Open: HS Prannoy storms into final after defeating Ginting

By ANI | Updated: March 26, 2022 22:10 IST

Indian shuttler Prannoy HS on Saturday stormed into the finals of the men's singles clash of the Swiss Open 2022 at St. Jakobshalle here in Basel.

Open in App

Indian shuttler Prannoy HS on Saturday stormed into the finals of the men's singles clash of the Swiss Open 2022 at St. Jakobshalle here in Basel.

Playing at court 2, Prannoy defeated Indonesia's Anthony Sinisuka Ginting 21-19, 19-21, 21-18, in the semi-final match that lasted for 72 minutes.

Earlier, the Indian shuttler had defeated his compatriot Parupalli Kashyap in the quarter-final and entered into the semis.

Later in the day, shuttler Kidmabi Srikanth will be facing Indonesia's Jonatan Christie in the men's singles semi-final clash.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: indonesiaBaselParupalli KashyapKashyap parupalliJonatan christieUrban ind
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalEid al-Fitr 2025 Date: Indonesia, Malaysia, Bangladesh to Celebrate Ramadan Eid on March 31

HealthIndonesia is Famous for Having the Most Doctors

Social ViralCrocodiles in Indonesia Allegedly Fake Death to Lure Humans Into Water; Video Goes Viral

NationalIndiGo, Air India Cancel Flights to Bali Due to Volcanic Eruption in Indonesia

InternationalIndonesia Bans Sale and Operation of Apple's iPhone 16; Here Is Why

Other Sports Realted Stories

Other SportsIPL 2025: Unpredictable Chinnaswamy wicket is no excuse, says Patidar on RCB’s home troubles

Other SportsKalinga Super Cup: Inter Kashi pull off shocking win over Bengaluru FC on penalties

Other SportsIPL 2025: Shami makes way for Unadkat as Mumbai elect to bowl against Hyderabad

Other SportsThe entire country stands as one, says BCCI VP Rajeev Shukla on Pahalgam attack

Other SportsIPL 2025: Bit surprised RR didn’t retain Buttler, KKR haven’t utilised their resources, says Kumble