Prannoy Kumar
Badminton player

Prannoy Kumar

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Badminton player
A.K.A.
H. S. Prannoy, Prannoy Haseena Sunil Kumar
Gender:
Male
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Birth:
17 July 1992
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Introduction Career Career titles & runners-up Record against selected opponents
The details
Biography

Introduction

Prannoy Haseena Sunil Kumar also known as HS Prannoy was born on July 17, 1992. He is an Indian badminton player and currently trains at the Gopichand Badminton Academy in Hyderabad. Prannoy originally hails from Thiruvananthapuram and is the Indian number 2 (as of 2 April 2015) in badminton Prannoy is supported by the GoSports Foundation, Bangalore and has been part of their scholarship programme since 2011.

Career

Early career

Prannoy came to prominence after winning the silver medal in Boys' singles at 2010 Summer Youth Olympics. He didn't stop there and followed it up with another silver, this time at the Bahrain International Challenge, 2011. Struggling for form and injuries a bit of a barren spell followed Prannoy following these achievements.

2013

In 2013, he managed to reach the final of the Tata Open International Challenge in Mumbai, eventually losing to fellow GoSports Foundation athlete Sourabh Verma in the final.

2014

In 2014, he claimed two All India Senior National Ranking Championships: Manorama Indian Open All India Senior Ranking Badminton Tournament, Kerala and the V.V.Natu Memorial All India Senior Ranking Badminton Tournament, Pune. However it was his exploits at the international circuit that caught everyone's attention. He was a semi-finalist at the 2014 India Open Grand Prix Gold, Bitburger Open Grand Prix Gold,2014 Macau Open Grand Prix Gold and the Sri Lanka Open International Badminton Challenge in Colombo

Prannoy surprised one and all by reaching the final of the 2014 Vietnam Open Grand Prix where he lost to number one seed and tournament favourite Dionysius Hayom Rumbaka of Indonesia. In the very next tournament, the Indonesia Open Grand Prix Gold Prannoy went one better, this time beating local favourite Firman Abdul Kholik of Indonesia in straight sets. Prannoy managed to end the year as the third highest ranked Indian at 21.

2015

HS Prannoy started off the year on a good note reaching the semifinals of the 2015 India Open Grand Prix Gold. He put up a spirited performance in the Semi's before bowing out to India's Srikanth Kidambiin 3 sets. Prannoy's greatest victory came in the Pre-Quarters of 2015 India Super Series when he beat an in form world number 2 Jan Ø. Jørgensen in 3 sets. This was probably his best performance so far earning him a lot of praise from all quarters. Prannoy played his heart out in the Quarter Finals too but ultimately Viktor Axelsen proved to be too good for him.

2016

HS Prannoy started 2016 on a good note by beating the German ace Marc Zwiebler in the finals of the Swiss Open Grand Prix gold by 21-19,21-0

2017

HS Prannoy plays for the Mumbai Rockets franchise in the 2017 season of the Premier Badminton League.

Career titles & runners-up

Individual titles (3)

S.no Year Tournament Opponent in final Score
1 2014 Indonesian Masters Indonesia Firman Abdul Kholik 21–11, 22–20
2 2014 Tata Open India Gurusai Dutt 21–16, 20–22, 21–17
3 2016 Swiss Open Germany Marc Zwiebler 21–18, 21–15
     Grand Prix Gold
     International Challenge

Individual runners-up (4)

S.no Year Tournament Opponent in final Score
1 2011 Bahrain International India Sourabh Varma 23–25, 12–21
2 2013 Tata Open India Sourabh Varma 12–21, 17–21
3 2014 Vietnam Open Indonesia D. H. Rumbaka 21–18, 15–21, 18–21
4 2016 South Asian Games India Srikanth Kidambi 21–11, 14–21, 6–21
     Grand Prix
     International Challenge

Record against selected opponents

Includes results against Olympic quarterfinals, Worlds semifinalists, and Super Series finalists, as well as all Olympic opponents.

  • India Srikanth Kidambi 1–2
  • India Ajay Jayaram 3–1
  • India R. M. V. Gurusaidutt 1–0
  • India Parupalli Kashyap 1–1
  • Malaysia Lee Chong Wei 0 - 1
  • Malaysia Liew Daren 2–0
  • Denmark Jan Ø. Jørgensen 3 - 0
  • Denmark Viktor Axelsen 0 - 1
  • South Korea Shon Wan-ho 0 - 2
  • South Korea Lee Hyun-il 0–1
  • Japan Kento Momota 0-2
  • Japan Takuma Ueda 0–1
  • Indonesia Sony Dwi Kuncoro 2–0
  • Indonesia Taufik Hidayat 1–0
  • China Chen Long 0 - 1
  • China Lin Dan 1 - 0
  • Thailand Boonsak Ponsana 1–0
  • Germany Marc Zwiebler 1 - 1
  • Chinese Taipei Chou Tien-Chen 0 - 1
  • Vietnam Nguyen Tien Minh 0–1