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Pusarla Venkata Sindhu career statistics

Overview

Pusarla Venkata Sindhu, commonly known as P. V. Sindhu, is an Indian professional badminton player from Hyderabad, Telangana. She is among the most decorated Indian shuttlers, having won medals across the Olympic Games, BWF World Championships, Commonwealth Games, Asian Games, and the BWF World Tour Finals. This article summarises her competitive record and career statistics in singles play.

Key facts

Full name Pusarla Venkata Sindhu
Born 5 July 1995, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh (now Telangana)
Plays Right-handed, women's singles
Coaches (notable) Pullela Gopichand, Kim Ji-hyun, Park Tae-sang, Hafiz Hashim, Mohammad Hafiz Hashim, Agus Dwi Santoso, Prakash Padukone Academy associations
Highest BWF ranking (singles) World No. 2
Olympic medals Silver (Rio 2016), Bronze (Tokyo 2020)
World Championship medals 1 gold, 2 silver, 2 bronze
Major civilian honours Padma Shri (2015), Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna (2016), Padma Bhushan (2020)

Background

Sindhu was born to P. V. Ramana and P. Vijaya, both former volleyball players; her father was a member of the Indian team that won bronze at the 1986 Asian Games. She began training in badminton at the age of eight and joined the Pullela Gopichand Badminton Academy in Hyderabad, where she developed her game under former All England champion Pullela Gopichand.

Olympic Games

Year Host Event Result
2016 Rio de Janeiro Women's singles Silver (lost final to Carolina Marín)
2020 Tokyo (held 2021) Women's singles Bronze (defeated He Bingjiao)
2024 Paris Women's singles Round of 16

With her Rio silver, Sindhu became the first Indian woman to win an Olympic silver medal, and with the Tokyo bronze she became the first Indian woman to win two individual Olympic medals.

BWF World Championships

Year Venue Result
2013 Guangzhou Bronze
2014 Copenhagen Bronze
2017 Glasgow Silver
2018 Nanjing Silver
2019 Basel Gold

Her 2019 victory in Basel, where she defeated Nozomi Okuhara of Japan in the final, made her the first Indian to win a singles gold at the World Championships.

Commonwealth Games

Year Host Singles Mixed team
2014 Glasgow Bronze Bronze
2018 Gold Coast Silver Gold
2022 Birmingham Gold Silver

Asian Games

Year Host Singles Team
2014 Incheon Bronze
2018 Jakarta–Palembang Silver Bronze

Asia Championships

Year Venue Result
2014 Gimcheon Bronze
2022 Manila Bronze

BWF World Tour and Superseries titles

Sindhu has won multiple titles on the BWF Superseries (2011–2017) and the BWF World Tour (from 2018). Her notable senior tournament wins include:

  • Macau Open: 2013, 2014
  • Malaysia Masters: 2013
  • Syed Modi International: 2017
  • India Open: 2017, 2022
  • Korea Open Superseries: 2017
  • BWF World Tour Finals: 2018 (Guangzhou) — first Indian to win the season-ending title
  • Singapore Open: 2022
  • Swiss Open: 2022

Junior and early career

  • 2009: Bronze at Sub-Junior Asian Badminton Championships, Colombo.
  • 2010: Silver at Iran Fajr International Challenge.
  • 2012: Title at Asian Junior Championships, Gimcheon — first Indian to win that event in singles.

Year-end BWF rankings (selected)

Year Singles ranking (approx.)
2012 Top 25
2013 Top 15
2016 Top 10
2017 Career-high No. 2
2019 Top 6
2022 Top 7

Premier Badminton League

In the domestic Premier Badminton League (PBL), Sindhu has represented teams including Awadhe Warriors, Chennai Smashers and Hyderabad Hunters, and was among the highest-paid players in successive auctions.

Awards and recognition

  • Arjuna Award (2013)
  • Padma Shri (2015)
  • Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna (2016)
  • BBC Indian Sportswoman of the Year (2020)
  • Padma Bhushan (2020)

Significance

Sindhu's medal record across consecutive Olympic Games, her 2019 World Championship gold, and her Commonwealth Games singles title in 2022 have made her one of India's most successful individual athletes. Her sustained presence in the global top ten over a decade contributed to the rise of badminton as a major spectator sport in India, alongside contemporaries such as Saina Nehwal, Kidambi Srikanth and Lakshya Sen.

References

  • Badminton World Federation (BWF) player profile and tournament archives.
  • Olympic Games official results, Rio 2016, Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024.
  • Commonwealth Games Federation results, 2014, 2018 and 2022.
  • Government of India, Ministry of Home Affairs — Padma awards announcements.
  • Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports — National Sports Awards citations.