Soumyajit Ghosh

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Soumyajit Ghosh
G. Sekharan, India-gold, Ghosh S, India-silver and Shen Qiang, Canada-bronze in Table Tennis, at the 3rd Commonwealth Youth Games-2008, in Pune on October 16, 2008.jpg
Ghosh (left) at the 2008 Commonwealth Youth Games
Personal information
Nickname(s)Baban
NationalityIndian
Born (1993-05-10) 10 May 1993 (age 30)
Siliguri, India
Playing styleRight-handed

Soumyajit Ghosh (born 10 May 1993) an Indian table tennis player from Siliguri, West Bengal.[1] He was the youngest Indian player to qualify for the London, 2012 Olympics.[2] He also became the youngest national champion at the age of 19, when he defeated Sharath Kamal in the 74th National Table Tennis Championships.[3] He was placed under provisional suspension and dropped from the Indian Team and replaced by Sanil Shetty for the 2018 Commonwealth Games after a complaint of rape was filed against him by an 18-year-old teenager in Barasat, West Bengal.[4][5] He has denied the allegations.[6] He later married the girl who accused him of rape.[7][8]

Personal[edit]

Ghosh hails from a middle-class family in Siliguri, West Bengal. His father Hari Sankar Ghosh works for the local municipal corporation. His mother Mina Ghosh is a homemaker. Soumyajit is his parent's only child. In India he trains at the NIS base in Patiala under coach Bhawani Mukherjee. When abroad he trains under coach Peter Karlsson in Falkenberg, Sweden. Ghosh is the Indian number 1 in table tennis as per the world ranking (nov 2016).[9] recently he is world no 63 As of November 2016

Career[edit]

Early career[edit]

In 2010, Ghosh won mixed doubles bronze medal at the World Junior Championships in Bahrain. He was instrumental in helping the Indian national team clinch a bronze medal in the World Junior Championships in 2011, by winning both his singles matches against South Korea in the quarter-finals.[10] He was also an integral part of the team that won the Asian Junior Championships in 2011.[11]

2013[edit]

In 2013, Ghosh created history by becoming the youngest national champion ever by beating six-time champion Sharath Kamal in the finals of the 74th National Table Tennis Championships.[12] He followed that up by winning the singles event at the Inter Institutional Table Tennis Championships in Dharwad, Karnataka.[13] He also won the singles event in the U-21 category at the Brazil Open in Santos.[14]

2014[edit]

At the Lusofonia Games, 2014 in Goa, Ghosh won gold medal in mixed doubles and men's team event as well as a silver and bronze in men's singles and doubles respectively.[15] He was also a quarter finalist at the Senior National Ranking Table Tennis Championships in Patna, 2014.[16] At the 2014 Commonwealth Games, Glasgow Ghosh reached the quarter finals of both men's singles and doubles. He also reached the semis of the team event.[17]

2015[edit]

At the WTTC 2015, Soumyajit reached R64 by beating Quadri Aruna.

2016[edit]

On 14 April 2016, Soumyajit Ghosh qualified for the 2016 Rio Olympics.[18] However, he made a first round exit in the men's individual event losing to Padasak Tanviriyavechakul of Thailand.[19]

2017[edit]

On 30 April 2017, Soumyajit Ghosh won the ITTF Challenge Seamaster Chile Open singles event, by beating compatriot Anthony Amalraj in the final. This was his first ITTF Pro title and he became the third Indian to win an ITTF event.

References[edit]

  1. http://www.tabletennisbug.com/2010/10/table-tennis-player-profile-soumyajit.html Table Tennis player profile: Soumyajit Ghosh
  2. Ankita Das and Soumyajit Ghosh are the youngest Indian players to qualify for the 2012 London Olympics
  3. Soumyajit Ghosh becomes youngest national table tennis champ
  4. Krishnakanta Chakraborty (1 April 2018). "2018 Commonwealth Games: Sanil Shetty replaces Soumyajit Ghosh". The Times of India. Retrieved 26 July 2018.
  5. Rakesh Rao (23 March 2018). "Soumyajit Ghosh provisionally suspended". The Hindu. Retrieved 26 July 2018.
  6. "CWG 2018: Tainted Soumyajit Ghosh left behind, India's 9-member table tennis squad leaves for Gold Coast". DNA India. 30 March 2018. Retrieved 26 July 2018.
  7. "Married to girl who accused him of rape, table tennis player Soumyajit Ghosh picking up pieces". The Indian Express. 6 August 2018. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  8. "Married to girl who accused him of rape, paddler Ghosh picking up pieces". The Times of India. 6 August 2018. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  9. TTFI Rankings
  10. Soumyajit Ghosh looks forward to London 2012
  11. Soumyajit, Ankita book London berth
  12. GHOSH YOUNGEST MEN'S CHAMP
  13. GHOSH, SHAMINI ARE CHAMPIONS
  14. Soumyajit, Manika win Brazil Open titles
  15. Lusofonia Games, Table Tennis Archived 19 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  16. Defending champion Ghosh ousted
  17. Glasgow, 2014
  18. "South Asian Olympic Qualifiers: Indian table-tennis aces Soumyajit Ghosh, Manika Batra book Rio berths - Firstpost". Firstpost. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
  19. "TT Players Mouma, Manika, Soumyajit and Kamal Lose in 1st Round". The Quint. 7 August 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2016.