<p>Bhavinaben Patel on Friday became the first Indian table tennis player to enter the Paralympic quarterfinals with a dominating win over Joyce de Oliveira of Brazil in the women's singles Class 4 event at the Tokyo Games here.</p>.<p>The 34-year-old Indian beat her Brazillian opponent 12-10 13-11, 11-6 in a Round of 16 contest that lasted 23 minutes.</p>.<p>She will meet Borislava Peric Rankovic of Serbia in the quarterfinals later in the day.</p>.<p>Athletes in Class 4 category have fair sitting balance and fully functional arms and hands. Their impairment may be due to a lower spinal-cord lesion or cerebral palsy.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/athletics-begins-at-tokyo-paralympics-1024052.html" target="_blank">Athletics begins at Tokyo Paralympics</a></strong></p>.<p>"My strategy was to play more towards the body of my opponent and that was what my coach told me. I executed my plans," Patel said after the match.</p>.<p>"My next opponent is world number two, so I have to really focus on my game and hope to win the match."</p>.<p>Earlier, the Indian had entered the Round of 16 after winning one match and losing the other group game.</p>.<p>She is the only Indian left in the fray in the table tennis competition after compatriot Sonalben Manubhai Patel lost both her group matches on Thursday to bow out. </p>
<p>Bhavinaben Patel on Friday became the first Indian table tennis player to enter the Paralympic quarterfinals with a dominating win over Joyce de Oliveira of Brazil in the women's singles Class 4 event at the Tokyo Games here.</p>.<p>The 34-year-old Indian beat her Brazillian opponent 12-10 13-11, 11-6 in a Round of 16 contest that lasted 23 minutes.</p>.<p>She will meet Borislava Peric Rankovic of Serbia in the quarterfinals later in the day.</p>.<p>Athletes in Class 4 category have fair sitting balance and fully functional arms and hands. Their impairment may be due to a lower spinal-cord lesion or cerebral palsy.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/athletics-begins-at-tokyo-paralympics-1024052.html" target="_blank">Athletics begins at Tokyo Paralympics</a></strong></p>.<p>"My strategy was to play more towards the body of my opponent and that was what my coach told me. I executed my plans," Patel said after the match.</p>.<p>"My next opponent is world number two, so I have to really focus on my game and hope to win the match."</p>.<p>Earlier, the Indian had entered the Round of 16 after winning one match and losing the other group game.</p>.<p>She is the only Indian left in the fray in the table tennis competition after compatriot Sonalben Manubhai Patel lost both her group matches on Thursday to bow out. </p>