Top seed Sayali Gokhale of Indian dumped Palwasha Bashir of Pakistan (pictured) 21-8, 21-3 in their women's singles pre-finals in a battle that lasted just 20 minutes. -Photo by APP

DHAKA Pakistan ended up with three bronze medals in badminton competition of 11th South Asian Games in the men, women individual events at the Wooden Floor Gymnasium here on Wednesday.

 

Pakistan number two Ahsan Qamar lost his men singles semifinals against second seed R M V Guru Sai Dutt of India 21-15, 21-11 in just 21 minutes.

Indian was assured of five gold and five silver medals in badminton. Having already bagged the men's and women's team gold medals earlier, Indian badminton teams led by national champions Chetan Anand and Trupti Murgunde hence all set to make a clean sweep on Thursday.

In the men's singles semi-finals, top seeded Anand made a short work of Lankan No 2 Dinuka Karunaratne 21-15, 21-5 in a 25-minute.

Top seed Sayali Gokhale of Indian dumped Palwasha Bashir of Pakistan 21-8, 21-3 in their women's singles pre-finals in a battle that lasted just 20 minutes. Sayali will face second seeded Trupti who thrashed Thilini Jayasinghe of Sri Lanka 21-10, 21-18 in 30 minutes in another last-four woman's singles.

Top seeded in men's doubles, Rupesh Kumar and Sanave Thomas will face a challenge from Chetan and Diju for the gold-silver decider tomorrow. Rupesh and Sanave defeated Pakistan's Rizwan Azam and Kashif Sulehri of Pakistan 21-14, 21-13 in 23 minutes.—APP

Opinion

Editorial

War & deception
Updated 09 Mar, 2026

War & deception

While there is little doubt that Iran is involved in many of the retaliatory attacks, the facts raise suspicions that another player may be at work.
The witness box
09 Mar, 2026

The witness box

IT is often the fear of the courtroom and what may transpire therein that drives many victims of crime, especially...
Asylum applications
09 Mar, 2026

Asylum applications

BRITAIN’S tough immigration posture has again drawn attention to the sharp rise in asylum claims by Pakistani...
Petrol shock
Updated 08 Mar, 2026

Petrol shock

With oil markets bracing for more volatility, more price shocks are inevitable in the coming weeks.
Women’s Day
08 Mar, 2026

Women’s Day

IT is a simple truth: societies progress when women are able to shape them. Yet the struggle for equality has never...
Rescuing hockey
08 Mar, 2026

Rescuing hockey

PAKISTAN hockey is back to where it should be. Years of misses came to an end on Friday with a long-awaited...