WTT Star Contender Table Tennis: Lubomir Jancarik upsets Manav Thakkar in second round Today Sports News

[ad_1]

Manav Thakkar, India’s big hope, crashed out in the second round of the men’s singles at the WTT Star Contender table tennis tournament at the Tamil Nadu Physical Education and Sports University on Friday (February 13, 2026).

World No. 174 Lubomír Jancarik of Czechia stunned the 33rd-ranked Indian, seeded four, in four games (11-6, 11-7, 9-11, 11-9), producing one of the biggest upsets of the event so far.

The 38-year-old Czech was sharp and consistent from the outset. His serves were precise, especially those backhand side spins, his returns were deep and controlled, and he handled both short exchanges and long rallies with assurance. Jancarik seldom gave away easy points and kept the pressure on throughout.

Manav, on the other hand, looked unusually off-colour. Known for his solidity from mid and back-court and his ability to not make many unforced errors, the Indian struggled for rhythm and committed a string of elementary mistakes that allowed his opponent to dictate play.

A seasoned campaigner—his best performance was reaching the final of the Kuwait Open in 2008) on the international circuit,–Jancarik has competed in around a dozen WTT events in 2025 and has already featured in two this season—the WTT Contender Muscat and the WTT Star Contender Doha. While he hasn’t made deep runs in recent tournaments, his temperament and tactical discipline were evident here.

A true journeyman of the tour, Jancarik continues to grind it out week after week–and on this occasion, his persistence paid off handsomely.

Speaking about the win to The Hindu, Jancarik said: “Manav is a very good player, but I think Manav would admit that the match was in my hands today, for sure. I was leading in all the sets,” he said. Having beaten him the only time the two met–in the WTT Feeder in Havirov (Czech Republic) in 2025, Jancarik said: “I just knew the system, his system, you know, and I was waiting what he will change or not.”

On his ambition, Jancarik said: “I want to be in the top 30 and play in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.”

Snehit produces finest performance

India’s S.F.R. Snehit produced one of his finest performances under pressure as he upset Mizuki Oikawa of Japan, the 13th seed ranked 61 in the world, 9-11, 15-17, 11-4, 11-6, 18-16 in 52 minutes in a men’s singles second round clash.

It was a match that swung like a wild pendulum especially after Snehit—he came from being 0-2 games down — saved two match points from 8-10 in the fifth and the deciding game. Snehit, ranked 100 in the world, saved four more to win the engaging contest. “I felt in the beginning, I was afraid of his game more. That’s why I felt I was making some errors, thinking he will finish me. But later, talking to my coach (Somnath Ghosh) and also seeing myself that I felt, okay, my ability is good that I can compete with him,” Snehit said, who will now next meet the top seed Oh Junsung of Korea.

Sarah De Nutte (left) and Swastika Ghosh. Photo: Special Arrangement

Currently ranked 100 in the world and placed fifth among Indians in the world rankings, Snehit said he would love to be part of the World team championships to be held in London from April 28 in London, but his focus would be the Asian Games. “The World championships will be huge for sure. I want to be the top 75 or 50 sooner than later. But I think my ultimate goal is to be in the Asian Games team.”

In another upset in women’s doubles, wild card entrants, Swastika Ghosh and Sarah De Nutte of Luxembourg defeated the fourth seeds, Diya Chitale and Yasashwini Ghorpade 11-6, 11-9, 3-11, 14-12 in the quarterfinals.

Published – February 13, 2026 01:37 pm IST

[ad_2]
WTT Star Contender Table Tennis: Lubomir Jancarik upsets Manav Thakkar in second round