Dipika Pallikal
Deepika Pallikal during a match
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Country | India | ||||||||||||||||||
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Born | [1] Chennai, India |
21 September 1991 ||||||||||||||||||
Height | 5.6ft | ||||||||||||||||||
Turned Pro | 2006 | ||||||||||||||||||
Coached by | Sarah Fitz-Gerald | ||||||||||||||||||
Racquet used | Technifibre | ||||||||||||||||||
Women's singles | |||||||||||||||||||
Highest ranking | No. 10 (December, 2012) | ||||||||||||||||||
Current ranking | No. 17 (January, 2016) | ||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) | 7 | ||||||||||||||||||
Tour final(s) | 5 | ||||||||||||||||||
World Open | QF (2011) | ||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Last updated on: January, 2016. |
Dipika Rebecca Pallikal (born 21 September 1991) is an Indian squash player. She is the first Indian to break into the top 10 in the WSA rankings.
Pallikal came to prominence in 2011, when she won three WISPA tour titles to attain a career-best ranking of 13th. She broke into the top 10 in December 2012.[2] Pallikal was runner-up in the Tournament of Champions in 2012 and reached the semifinals of the 2012 Australian Open. She won her sixth WSA title by winning the Meadowood Pharmacy Open on February 2013. At the 2014 Commonwealth Games, Pallikal and Joshna Chinappa won gold in the squash women's doubles event.[3]
Contents
Early life
Pallikal was born in Chennai to a Malayali family.[4] She is the daughter of Sanjiv George and Susan Itticheria, both Syrian Christians originally from the state of Kerala.[5][6] Her mother played international cricket for the Indian women's team.[7][8] Pallikal played her first international tournament in London when she was in her sixth grade, and won several tournaments on the European Junior Squash Circuit.[citation needed]
Professional career
Pallikal turned professional in 2006,[9] but her career was filled with ups and downs initially. She became more consistent and started notching up winning performances after her brief training stint in Egypt in the beginning of 2011.[9]
She clinched her first of three WISPA titles for 2011 in September by winning the Orange County Open in Irvine, California.[10] She notched up her second in the United States with another WISPA tour event victory.[10] The third came in Hong Kong in the Crocodile Challenge Cup in December 2011 and that took her to number 17 in world rankings.[10] However it was her performance in the World Open that shot her into the limelight. She finished in the top eight. She claimed a ranking of 14 as a result of these victories in February 2012, surpassing the earlier best world ranking by an Indian - 27th by former national champion Misha Grewal in 1995.
In January 2012, she became the first Indian ever to reach the summit clash of a Silver event when she reached the final of the Tournament of Champions squash meet in New York.[11] In August same year, she went one step further when she reached the semifinals of a gold event, the 2012 Australian Open, another first for an Indian.[12]
Pallikal was an integral part of the Indian squash team that finished fifth in the 2012 Women's World Team Squash Championships.[13] India, seeded tenth in the event, defeated higher ranked Netherlands and Ireland in the process.[14] She defeated players like Madeline Perry in the tournament.[15] Joshna Chinappa was another key player in the Indian line-up. In February 2013, She won her sixth WSA title of her career after outplaying Joey Chan of Hong Kong 11-9, 11-7, 11-4 in the final of the Meadowood Pharmacy Open in the Canadian city of Winnipeg.[16]
In December 2012, she broke into the top 10 by achieving a career best of ranking of 10.[2] She became the first Female Squash player to be conferred with the Arjuna Award, India's second highest sporting award in the year 2012.[17] As of Feb, 2014 She is back at no. 10 in the latest Women’s Squash Association (WSA) rankings despite enduring a tough start to the year.[18] At the 2014 Commonwealth Games she along with Joshna Chinappa won the squash women’s doubles gold medal, making it India's first ever Commonwealth Games medal in the sport.[3]
Pallikal trains at the ICL-TNSRA Academy at Chennai under Cyrus Poncha and Major (rtd) S. Maniam. Her coach is the six time world champion, Sarah Fitz-Gerald to whom she attributes most of her recent success.
Boycott of National Championship
She ignored participating National Championship Squash competition for four times including 2015 championship due to inequality in prize money. In National Championship, women champion winner will be awarded only 40% prize amount of men championship winner. [19]
Career statistics
Following are the highlights of Pallikal's WSA tour career.[10]
Event | Year | Result |
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Winnipeg Winter Club Open | 2015 | Winner |
Macau Squash Open | 2013 | Winner [20] |
Meadowood Pharmacy Open | 2013 | Winner |
Australian Open | 2012 | Semifinals |
Tournament of Champions | 2012 | Runner Up |
Crocodile Challenge Cup | 2011 | Winner |
World Open | 2011 | Quarterfinal |
Dread Sports Series | 2011 | Winner |
Orange County Open | 2011 | Winner |
Awards
Award | Year |
---|---|
Arjuna Award[17] | 2012 |
Padma Shri[21] | 2014 |
Personal life
She studied at Ethiraj College majoring in English (IIIrd year-2012-2013). On 15 November 2013, she was engaged to Indian Cricketer Dinesh Karthik.[22][23] She married Dinesh Karthik in both traditional Christian wedding style and Hindu wedding style on 18 August 2015 and 20 August 2015 respectively.[24]
Dipika Pallikal has also been involved in sports based ecommerce; She is a brand ambassador of sports365.in an online store selling sports goods and fitness equipment.
References
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- ↑ India / Players / Susan Itticheria – ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
- ↑ Abishek Mukherjee (20 August 2015). "Susan Itticheria-Dinesh Karthik and other cricket in-laws" – Cricket Country. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.. |
- Articles with unsourced statements from November 2015
- Indian squash players
- 1991 births
- Living people
- Squash players at the 2010 Commonwealth Games
- Asian Games medalists in squash
- Squash players at the 2010 Asian Games
- Squash players at the 2014 Asian Games
- Asian Games bronze medalists
- Recipients of the Arjuna Award
- Recipients of the Padma Shri
- Competitors at the 2014 Commonwealth Games
- Commonwealth Games gold medallists for India
- Sportspeople from Chennai
- Indian Christians