<p> Double Olympic medallist P V Sindhu stayed on course for an elusive gold medal after progressing to her second successive women's singles final at the Commonwealth Games here on Sunday.</p>.<p>The 27-year-old Indian rode on her superior technical superiority to outwit Singapore's Yeo Jia Min 21-19 21-17 in a 49-minute contest.</p>.<p>A former world champion, Sindhu, who has a silver and a bronze from the 2018 and 2014 editions, was clearly the better player on display as she kept a firm grip on the match.</p>.<p>Sindhu seemed a bit restricted in her movement with the achilles of her left leg strapped. The Singaporean played some good-looking shots to make it 8-4 early on but she was callous to allow the Indian draw level.</p>.<p>Sindhu entered the break with a two-point lead after producing a straight drop.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/boxers-amit-panghal-nitu-ghanghas-win-gold-at-commonwealth-games-1133975.html" target="_blank">Boxers Amit Panghal, Nitu Ghanghas win gold at Commonwealth Games</a></strong></p>.<p>The Indian depended on her technical acumen, producing the right shots at the right time to keep moving ahead.</p>.<p>Yeo Jia Min was too erratic to put any pressure on the Indian, who moved to 19-12 with a perfect net shot.</p>.<p>The Singaporean used her cross court slices to trouble the Indian, making her move diagonally to reduce the gap to 16-19. But a forehand return going to net from her gave Sindhu three game points, and she converted it on the third attempt.</p>.<p>Yeo made a good start once again after the change of ends, but Sindhu reeled off five straight points to again draw parity.</p>.<p>It turned into a seesaw battle after that with the two playing some intense rallies, but Sindhu ensured she had her nose ahead at the interval as she unleashed a straight down-the-line smash.</p>.<p>A wide return and one going to net put Sindhu two points away from the final. Then Yeo going long gave Sindhu five match points. She squandered two before unleashing a pitch-perfect body smash to secure her place in the final.</p>
<p> Double Olympic medallist P V Sindhu stayed on course for an elusive gold medal after progressing to her second successive women's singles final at the Commonwealth Games here on Sunday.</p>.<p>The 27-year-old Indian rode on her superior technical superiority to outwit Singapore's Yeo Jia Min 21-19 21-17 in a 49-minute contest.</p>.<p>A former world champion, Sindhu, who has a silver and a bronze from the 2018 and 2014 editions, was clearly the better player on display as she kept a firm grip on the match.</p>.<p>Sindhu seemed a bit restricted in her movement with the achilles of her left leg strapped. The Singaporean played some good-looking shots to make it 8-4 early on but she was callous to allow the Indian draw level.</p>.<p>Sindhu entered the break with a two-point lead after producing a straight drop.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/boxers-amit-panghal-nitu-ghanghas-win-gold-at-commonwealth-games-1133975.html" target="_blank">Boxers Amit Panghal, Nitu Ghanghas win gold at Commonwealth Games</a></strong></p>.<p>The Indian depended on her technical acumen, producing the right shots at the right time to keep moving ahead.</p>.<p>Yeo Jia Min was too erratic to put any pressure on the Indian, who moved to 19-12 with a perfect net shot.</p>.<p>The Singaporean used her cross court slices to trouble the Indian, making her move diagonally to reduce the gap to 16-19. But a forehand return going to net from her gave Sindhu three game points, and she converted it on the third attempt.</p>.<p>Yeo made a good start once again after the change of ends, but Sindhu reeled off five straight points to again draw parity.</p>.<p>It turned into a seesaw battle after that with the two playing some intense rallies, but Sindhu ensured she had her nose ahead at the interval as she unleashed a straight down-the-line smash.</p>.<p>A wide return and one going to net put Sindhu two points away from the final. Then Yeo going long gave Sindhu five match points. She squandered two before unleashing a pitch-perfect body smash to secure her place in the final.</p>