Ahmedabad, Aug 1 (IANS) Adani Sportsline’s “Garv Hai” athlete Poymantee Baisya continued her impressive run on the international table tennis circuit, securing the silver medal in the mixed doubles category alongside partner Akash Pal at the WTT Contender Lagos 2025.
Baisya and Pal, the top seeds in the draw, made history by becoming only the second Indian mixed doubles pair to reach the final of a WTT Contender event, which was held in Lagos, Nigeria, from July 22 to 26.
The reigning national champions dominated early rounds with straight-game wins in both the opener and quarterfinal. In the semifinals, they defeated Italy’s John Oyebode and Gaia Monfardini 3-1 before going down 1-3 in the final to France’s Jules Rolland and Prithika Pavade.
“It’s a great moment for me and Akash. We’ve been enjoying our game, and it’s truly special to be only the second Indian pair to reach the final of a WTT Contender event,” said Baisya.
Congratulating Baisya on her milestone, Sanjay Adesara, Chief Business Officer, Adani Sportsline, said, “Many congratulations to Poymantee and her mixed doubles partner Akash for this incredible achievement. It is a proud moment for India and for all of us at Adani Sportsline.”
India’s Sathiyan Gnanasekaran and Akash Pal won the men’s doubles title, beating the French pair of Leo De Nodrest and Julles Rolland in straight games in just under 22 minutes at the WTT Contender event in Lagos, Nigeria, on Saturday.
However, ace woman paddler Sreeja Akula went down 1-4 to second seed Honoka Hashimoto in a 48-minute battle. Hashimoto won 11-7, 11-3, 11-4, 9-11, 13-11 in a hard-fought encounter.
--IANS
bsk/
You may also like
'I was referee in Aston Villa and Birmingham scrap – I had to put one star in a headlock'
Inside hellhole jail where British Angel Delight drug smugglers face terrifying 'threats'
'Ride of a lifetime': SpaceX delivers new crew to ISS in record-breaking 15 hours; station population hits 11
Woman visits ice cream van for first time in 43 years and is floored by cost
'Our Jet2 holiday was ruined because we flew to the wrong Spanish island by mistake'