Taipei City: On a comeback trail after recovering from a series of injuries, Sourabh Verma on Sunday clinched the men's singles title at the Chinese Taipei Open after defeating Malaysia's Daren Liew in the summit clash of the US$55,000 Grand Prix tournament here.
The 23-year-old from Madhya Pradesh rallied to grab the first two games and emerged victorious after his opponent Liew retired in the third game due to a shoulder injury with the scoreline reading 12-10, 12-10, 3-3 in the Indian's favour.
It was a case of being third time lucky as Sourabh, who had ended runners-up at Belgium and Poland international challengers, finally crossed the finishing line after spending almost a year on the sidelines due to elbow and knee injuries last year.
"It is a great victory for me and a much needed one.
I had reached the finals at Belgium and Poland but could not win.
So I was determined not to make the same mistakes here and I am happy I could win today," Sourabh, who was the 2011 national champion and was runners-up this year, told PTI over the phone.
Sourabh started off well in the opening game and was leading 5-3 at one stage but Liew soon turned the tables with a five-point burst to lead 8-5.
But Sourabh kept breathing down his neck and at 7-10, reeled off five straight points to grab the first game.
The second game turned out to be more difficult as Liew once again surged to a 5-1 lead and held on till 10-6 when the Indian stepped on the gas and once again grabbed six points on the trot to leave Liew shocked.
In the third game, after an initial battle, Liew retired at 3-3 owing to a problematic shoulder.
"My opponent was playing well but in the third game he felt some shoulder pain and retired.
He was in fact leading in the first two games and was very comfortable.
I started well but made too many mistakes.
But I managed to pull off the opening game.
In the second game also I gave away too many easy points but I am happy I could control it in the end," Sourabh said.