All posts tagged: lakshya sen vs Loh Kean Yew

Lakshya Sen storms into the semi-final of Kumamoto Masters Japan 2025

Lakshya Sen storms into the semi-final of Kumamoto Masters Japan 2025

Indian ace Lakshya Sen advanced to the semifinals of the 2025 Kumamoto Masters Super500 tournament in Kumamoto City, Japan, on Friday. He defeated former world champion Loh Kean Yew of Singapore in just a 40-minute straight-game encounter, 21-13, 21-17, to reach his first semifinal on the Tour after two months. Currently sitting in 13th place on the World Tour Rankings, this result will help him rise a few spots and might sneak into the 8 available spots if he further extends his run. He will next take on the home favourite Kenta Nishimoto in the semi-final on Saturday, which will be the sixth meeting between the two players, with Lalshya leading the head-to-head by 3-2. Lakshya had a dominant start to the match and was commanding the rallies with his aggressive play, comfortably closing the opening game 21-13. But the second game had a very close start with the scores tied on 9-9 just before the mid-game interval, but then Lakshya won 6 consecutive points to take a massive lead. However, Loh didn’t lose his …

Lakshya Sen storms into the semi-final of Kumamoto Masters Japan 2025

Lakshya Sen storms into the semi-final of Kumamoto Masters Japan 2025

Indian ace Lakshya Sen advanced to the semifinals of the 2025 Kumamoto Masters Super500 tournament in Kumamoto City, Japan, on Friday. He defeated former world champion Loh Kean Yew of Singapore in just a 40-minute straight-game encounter, 21-13, 21-17, to reach his first semifinal on the Tour after two months. Currently sitting in 13th place on the World Tour Rankings, this result will help him rise a few spots and might sneak into the 8 available spots if he further extends his run. He will next take on the home favourite Kenta Nishimoto in the semi-final on Saturday, which will be the sixth meeting between the two players, with Lalshya leading the head-to-head by 3-2. Lakshya had a dominant start to the match and was commanding the rallies with his aggressive play, comfortably closing the opening game 21-13. But the second game had a very close start with the scores tied on 9-9 just before the mid-game interval, but then Lakshya won 6 consecutive points to take a massive lead. However, Loh didn’t lose his …

Kumamoto Japan Masters: Lakshya Sen powers past former world champion Loh Kean Yew in straight games to reach semis | Badminton News

Kumamoto Japan Masters: Lakshya Sen powers past former world champion Loh Kean Yew in straight games to reach semis | Badminton News

During Loh Kean Yew’s consistently breathtaking performances in Huelva at the 2021 World Championships, former Denmark player and recently-appointed coach HK Vittinghus remarked on Twitter (now X): “In badminton we now have three levels of how fast you can be: Fast, (Anthony) Ginting fast, Loh Kean Yew fast!” That’s how the Singaporean was moving on court that week in Spain when he went on to famously win the gold medal, his best ever performance at the event. That week, Lakshya too had a memorable run, registering his best run at the Worlds to date, winning bronze. The Indian may have slipped down the world rankings, but when he is at his best, he is no slouch on the badminton court either. Like Loh, Lakshya also thrives on remarkable retrieval skills, showcasing the explosive speed needed to recover after defending. Both are brilliant at the net and possess a potent jump smash. Their games match up rather evenly, and while both have had less-than-ideal international scenes, at time during the second game of their quarterfinal clash …

With sharper net play, Lakshya Sen beats Loh Kean Yew to enter semifinals of the French Open | Badminton News

No one in Michael Jackson’s troupe ever thought of practical problems like slipping when there’s blood on the dance-floor. But Lakshya Sen who had a nasty gnash on his right hand finger which refused to stop dripping, and his opponent Loh Kean Yew, two of the bounciest beings on a badminton court, had to mind the droplets before resuming their subsequent dancing on the French Open court. In the end, Sen made the Paris semifinals defeating Loh 19-21, 21-15, 21-13, making him sweat at the net, at which the Singaporean has never been known to be very adept. The Indian enters every tour event like it’s a personal knockout round for him — a race to Olympics, given his ranking currently is out of Top 16. He needs deep runs in big tournaments, and is luckily good at shrugging off reputations of opponents. All England defending champion Li Shifeng — Check. 2021 World Champion Loh Kean Yew — Check. Tamed in three. Reputations and repertoire don’t scare Sen, but that Olympic qualification needs to be …