MUTUA EXIT SHOW

Mutua impresses in Africa Top 16 despite defeat in Tunisia

Speaking in Tunis, Mutua noted that he is hoping to minimise on his costly mistakes.

In Summary

•Brian beat Overmeyer 11-8 in the first set and lost 8-11 and 10-12 in the second and third. 

•Nevertheless, Mutua who is the tournament’s underdog has impressed with his fighting spirit.

Brian Mutua
Brian Mutua
Image: COURTESY

Kenya’s Brian Mutua lost 3-0 to Algerian Sami Kherouf of Algeria in the position 9-16 matches of the ITTF Africa top 16 at the Olympique Stade Dr Rades in Tunis.

After failing to secure a quarter-final slot, Mutua’s loss at the hands of the North African, saw him dip to the position 13-16, where he lost 3-2 to Theo Cogill of South Africa. The South African got Mutua’s fixture after losing to Gideon Kassa of Congo.

Speaking in Tunis, Mutua noted that he is hoping to minimise on his costly mistakes. Nevertheless, Mutua who is the tournament’s underdog has impressed with his fighting spirit.

“When I play with top players, I need to be consistent in the attack. I tend to make errors while trying to attack instead of being consistent. This has cost me dearly in this tournament. I need to work a lot more on multiple balls and undergo more physical training to be able to reach out to the balls easily,” said Mutua.

In the preliminary stage, Mutua lost two matches and won one. He fell to the group’s top seed Saleh Ahmed of Egypt (0-3) and Fanny Kokou of Togo (1-3) before upsetting South African player Overmeyer Shane 3-2.

Brian beat Overmeyer 11-8 in the first set and lost 8-11 and 10-12 in the second and third. Brian bounced back to take the last two by 11-8 margin.

In the match against Fanny, Mutua rallied from a set deficit, to pull through in the second set, thanks to an 11-6 comeback. But after a few service errors, he dropped the last two sets (11-6, 11-7) losing the match to the Togolese who savoured a superior backhand.

“I tried my best to thwart his attacks but service issues nipped my game plan in the bud,” he said. Earlier, Ahmed who is the Group 2 top seed, defeated Overmeyer 3-0 (11-3, 11-6, 11-5).

Despite the defeats he has suffered to more established players, Mutua became the cynosure of all eyes in Tunis as the 21-year-old showed that he is a good learner after he humbled one of Africa’s veterans, South Africa’s Shane Overmeyer, in the second round of the men’s singles tie.

The Physical Sciences undergraduate of Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology proved he has come of age as he fought back from behind to claim a 3-2 victory against the 40-year-old South African.