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Nirupama, Manisha get doubles entry in Olympics
Indian women`s tennis got an unexpected boost with its two top players, Nirupama Vaidyanathan and Manisha Malhotra, getting direct entries to the doubles event of the Olympic Games tennis championship on Wednesday.
Indian women's tennis got an
unexpected boost with its two top players, Nirupama
Vaidyanathan and Manisha Malhotra, getting direct entries
to the doubles event of the Olympic Games tennis championship
on Wednesday.
The duo, who represented India at the fed cup tournament
in Thailand in February before bowing out in the final league
match, got a shot in the arm after German star Anke Huber
pulled out of both the singles and doubles events with a
wrist injury.
Nirupama and Manisha will now replace Huber and her partner Jana Kandarr in the draw for the 32-nation women's doubles tournament which will be made on Friday at the Sydney Opera House.
India's chef-de-mission Ashok Mattoo said necessary clearances had been obtained from all concerned and he was making frantic efforts to contact the two players through All India Tennis Association (AITA) in New Delhi.
Nirupama, the 1998 Bangkok Asian Games bronze medal winner, is right now in the United States and Manisha, who won the 10,000 ITF women's circuit event in Delhi last week, is in Paris. Nirupama and Manisha are based in the United States and have been growing tennis-wise outside the Indian system.
While Nirupama's credentials are already established (she is in world's top 200), the win over the weekend for national grass court champion Manisha proves that she is in good form.
Bureau Report
Nirupama and Manisha will now replace Huber and her partner Jana Kandarr in the draw for the 32-nation women's doubles tournament which will be made on Friday at the Sydney Opera House.
India's chef-de-mission Ashok Mattoo said necessary clearances had been obtained from all concerned and he was making frantic efforts to contact the two players through All India Tennis Association (AITA) in New Delhi.
Nirupama, the 1998 Bangkok Asian Games bronze medal winner, is right now in the United States and Manisha, who won the 10,000 ITF women's circuit event in Delhi last week, is in Paris. Nirupama and Manisha are based in the United States and have been growing tennis-wise outside the Indian system.
While Nirupama's credentials are already established (she is in world's top 200), the win over the weekend for national grass court champion Manisha proves that she is in good form.
Bureau Report