
New Delhi, April 11 Vaishnavi Adkar displayed remarkable resilience with a hard-fought victory over higher-ranked Sohyun Park, helping India level the score against South Korea. However, Ankita Raina's earlier defeat to Dayeon Back dashed India's hopes of qualifying for the Billie Jean King Cup World Cup Play-offs on Saturday.
Starting the day in fourth place, India needed a 3-0 sweep against Korea to secure a top-two finish. Captain Vishal Uppal fielded his experienced player, Ankita, in the opening singles, but Dayeon proved too strong, handing India a setback.
The 33-year-old Ankita, ranked 581, fought valiantly against the 343rd-ranked Korean, but ultimately lost 1-6, 5-7, in one hour and 55 minutes. This was her first singles match of the tournament, having only played doubles.
Vaishnavi then kept the contest alive, producing a gritty 7-6(2), 7-6(5) victory over Park, who was ranked 107 places above her at 276.
With a likely fourth-place finish, India will remain in Group I of the Asia/Oceania.
The two-hour-17-minute match between Vaishnavi and Park was marked by frequent breaks of serve and high-quality rallies. Both players went all out, resulting in a fair share of unforced errors, but the intensity kept the contest closely contested.
Vaishnavi's sharp cross-court backhands stood out, while Park impressed with her court coverage and angled forehand winners. The Indian briefly took a medical timeout in the second set for a back issue but showed no dip in intensity thereafter.
Vaishnavi earned her first match point in the 10th game of the second set after a forehand slice error from Park, but failed to convert. Park then held under pressure, and subsequently broke Vaishnavi in the 11th game to move within a game of forcing a decider.
However, Vaishnavi immediately broke back, pushing the set into a tie-break. Trailing 0-3 in the breaker, she mounted a strong comeback and sealed the match when Park's return went long.
Ankita and Rutuja Bhosale are set to play the concluding doubles rubber against Dayeon Back and Eunhye Lee. Earlier, Ankita had multiple chances in the match but failed to capitalize at key moments. She capitalized on a weak backhand slice return for a volley winner to earn two break points in the opening game, but failed to convert either.
She faced a break point in the following game when her drop shot was punished by Dayeon, but saved it after a long rally, finishing with an overhead volley winner. However, Ankita offered another break chance after netting a forehand following six deuce points, and this time the Korean capitalized, striking a forehand winner off yet another weak drop shot.
Ankita's repeated use of the drop shot proved puzzling as Dayeon handled them comfortably, often finishing points with winners. After nearly 30 minutes, the Korean had surged to a commanding 3-0 lead. It soon became 4-0 when Ankita netted a forehand on a deep return and another drop-shot error handed Dayeon the point.
Much to the delight of the sparse home crowd, Ankita got on the board by breaking Dayeon in the next game, but there was no shift in momentum. She dropped serve again in the seventh game to concede the opening set, yet another drop shot landing wide proving costly. Ankita significantly cut down on her unforced errors in the second set and even held serve at love, staying neck-and-neck with Dayeon till the eighth game. Growing in confidence, she urged the crowd to cheer louder after executing a stunning drop shot in the seventh game. She then had a chance to nose ahead in the eighth game when Dayeon made a string of unforced errors. Ankita squandered the first break point but earned another, which she converted after the Korean sent a return long. Ankita could not capitalize on the break and dropped her serve immediately. The final slide came when at 30-15 she could not pick up a half-volley, followed that with consecutive returns on the, allowing Dayoen to serve out the match in the next game.