Aditendra Singh Beats Harshvardhan Ahuja to Claim Second Lucknow Open Title
Aditendra Singh beat Harshvardhan Ahuja to win the Intermediate Men’s Singles at the Lucknow Open (PWR 100), clinching his second title and underlining rising domestic depth.

Aditendra Singh secured the Intermediate Men’s Singles crown at the Lucknow Open (PWR 100) on February 1, 2026, beating Harshvardhan Ahuja in the final. Match reports highlighted Aditendra’s disciplined play, strategic depth, and ability to vary pace which unsettled Harshvardhan, and several headlines declared that Aditendra clinched his second title.
The final showcased Aditendra’s composed approach and control. Match coverage described composed play and a strong command of the final, with Aditendra changing tempo and using strategic variety to keep Harshvardhan off rhythm. Those attributes, rather than raw power alone, proved decisive in the Intermediate Men’s Singles decider in Lucknow.
Precise scorelines and detailed statistics for the final were not included in initial reports, and the available coverage does not clarify whether "second title" refers to Aditendra’s second career trophy, his second Lucknow Open win, or another milestone. A social-media post read: "Aditendra Singh wins the Men's Singles Intermediate title with composed play and a strong command of the final. Harshvardhan Ahuja takes the" and an original report concluded in mid-sentence: "This victory marked Adi" — both fragments underscore the need for official confirmation on historical context and match numbers.
The Lucknow Open produced a busy winners’ board beyond the Intermediate singles. Parth Ratra emerged victorious in the Advanced Men’s Singles final over Madhav Prakash, with headlines reporting that Ratra lifts a second title. In the Intermediate Open Men’s Doubles, the pairing of Rutik Singh and Raunak Chabbra sealed the title against the duo listed as Karan and Archit. Those results point to a deepening domestic circuit where multiple young players are locking down trophies across divisions.

For the Asian pickleball scene, the Lucknow Open as a PWR 100 stop is a meaningful proving ground. Performances like Aditendra Singh’s underline how tactical acumen and pace control have become as important as raw shot-making in higher-level regional play. The tournament also signals growing competitive opportunity at home for India’s next generation of players, feeding the broader PWR circuit with talent.
Readers should expect official match scores, ranking implications, and player quotes to be released as tournament organizers and player teams supply full results. With Parth Ratra’s Advanced title and Rutik Singh–Raunak Chabbra’s doubles victory alongside Aditendra’s win, the Lucknow Open leaves clear momentum for these players as the 2026 PWR calendar progresses.
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