Poorvisha S. Ram Explained

Poorvisha S. Ram
Country:India
Birth Date:1995 1, df=yes
Birth Place:Bangalore, Karnataka, India
Years Active:2008–present
Handedness:Right
Event:Women's & mixed doubles
Highest Ranking:30 (WD with Meghana Jakkampudi 15 November 2018)
85 (XD with Nithin H. V. 24 January 2023)
Current Ranking:258 (WD), 85 (XD)
Date Of Current Ranking:24 January 2023
Bwf Id:493358AD-B9D2-4A0C-ADCA-6FD8FC52C3EA

Poorvisha S. Ram (born 24 January 1995) is an Indian badminton player who specializes in doubles and mixed doubles.[1] As of February 2020, she is ranked 48 in doubles. She had attained career best ranking of 30 in November 2018.[2] She was previously ranked 3 in doubles at national level.[3]

Biography

Poorvisha was born in 1995, in Bangalore, Karnataka. She completed her early education at Sishu Griha Montessori and High School, in Bangalore. Poorvisha started playing badminton in 2005 and represented Karnataka at national level in 2007. She won her first competitive tournament at the age of 13 in 2008 when she won a national level inter-school tournament.[4]

In 2009, Poorvisha won silver medal at the 35th National Sports Festival for Women at Margao, Goa. She has won the national championship in junior circuit consecutively for three years in 2010, 2011 and 2012.[5] In December 2012, Poorvisha represented India at Li-Ning Singapore Youth International Series and won silver medal in the women's double event.[6]

Initially, Poorvisha trained at B. N. Sudhakar Academy in Bangalore but moved to Hyderabad in 2013 where she trained under Pullela Gopichand at Gopichand Badminton Academy, Hyderabad. Currently, she trains under Arun Vishnu and Pradnya Gadre along with Gopichand.[5]

Poorvisha won her first senior title in 2015 at Uganda International double event with N. Sikki Reddy. Later that year, she won Bahrain International with Arathi Sara Sunil. In late 2015, Poorvisha was out for sixteen weeks due to career ending lateral and medical epicondylitis, however, she recovered and made a come back in early 2016.[7]

In 2016, Poorvisha partnered with Meghana Jakkampudi and won Nepal International in Kathmandu. Since 2016, Poorvisha has spent her double career in partnership with Jakkampudi whereas in mixed doubles, she partners with Krishna Prasad Ganga.[7] In 2017, Poorvisha and Jakkampudi appeared in various international competitions including 2017 Syed Modi International Grand Prix Gold and 2017 All England Super Series Premier.[5] They reached the finals of Tata Open India International in 2018. In 2019, the pair appeared in Russian Open semifinals where they lost to Japanese pair of Miki Kashihara and Miyuki Kato.[8]

Achievements

BWF International Challenge/Series (5 titles, 3 runners-up)

Women's doubles

YearTournamentPartnerOpponentScoreResult
2015Uganda International N. Sikki Reddy Sorayya Aghaei
Negin Amiripour
11–7, 6–11, 8–11, 11–7, 11–3 Winner
2015Bahrain International Arathi Sara Sunil Palwasha Bashir
Sara Mohmand
21–14, 21–8 Winner
2016Bangladesh International Meghana Jakkampudi Nguyễn Thị Sen
Vũ Thị Trang
6–21, 22–20, 11–21 Runner-up
2016Nepal International Meghana Jakkampudi Anoushka Parikh
Harika Veludurthi
21–16, 21–12 Winner
2018Tata Open India International Meghana Jakkampudi Ng Wing Yung
Yeung Nga Ting
10–21, 11–21 Runner-up
2020Uganda International Meghana Jakkampudi Daniela Macías
Dánica Nishimura
21–17, 20–22, 21–14 Winner
2022Cameroon International Srivedya Gurazada Kasturi Radhakrishnan
Venosha Radhakrishnan
21–12, 21–14 Winner

Mixed doubles

BWF International Challenge tournament

BWF International Series tournament

BWF Future Series tournament

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Players: Poorvisha S Ram . bwfbadminton.com. Badminton World Federation. 10 December 2016.
  2. Web site: Player Profile of Poorvisha S. Ram . www.badmintoninindia.com . . 10 December 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161220120938/http://www.badmintoninindia.com/viewplayer/Poorvisha-S.-Ram-/8264 . 20 December 2016 . dead .
  3. Web site: Poorvisha S Ram's profile at The Bridge. thebridge.in. The Bridge. 22 February 2020.
  4. Web site: Poorvisha S. Ram profile at Sports Beat India. sportsbeatsindia.com. 9 October 2017. SportsBeatsIndia. 22 February 2020.
  5. Web site: More power to the racquet!. deccanherald.com. 7 April 2017. Deccan Herald. 22 February 2020.
  6. Web site: Poorvisha Karnataka proud at Li Ning Singapore Series. kba.org.in. Karnataka Badminton Association. 22 February 2020.
  7. News: Badminton's new jodi is striking the right notes. The Times of India. 16 March 2017 . 22 February 2020.
  8. Web site: Russian Open: Meghana enters women's and mixed doubles semis . sportstar.thehindu.com. 19 July 2019 . The Hindu. 22 February 2020.