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Bhavya and Miheet Dhaneja win Under-14 doubles title at Pickle Up 4.0

Bhavya and Miheet Dhaneja crushed Riyansh and Yuwan 15-5 to claim the Under-14 boys' doubles crown at Pickle Up 4.0.

David Kumar··2 min read
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Bhavya and Miheet Dhaneja win Under-14 doubles title at Pickle Up 4.0
Source: timesnownews.com

Bhavya and Miheet Dhaneja turned the Under-14 boys' doubles final into a showcase for India’s rising youth pipeline, beating Riyansh and Yuwan 15-5 at Pickle Up 4.0 with a level of control that made the margin feel even wider. From the opening exchanges, the Dhanejas looked sharper at the net, faster in transition and more disciplined in their court positioning, keeping their opponents under constant pressure and dictating the rhythm of the match.

What stood out most was not just the score, but the way Bhavya and Miheet won it. Their patterns were cleaner, their returns were more aggressive and their point construction showed an understanding of when to absorb pace and when to accelerate. In youth pickleball, that matters because the sport rewards players who can blend patience with precision rather than simply reacting to the next shot. The final suggested both Dhanejas already have that structure in place, and that is exactly the kind of foundation India wants from its junior circuit.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The result also reflects the growing seriousness of age-group competition in Rajasthan. A PWR100 event with organized brackets and published outcomes is no longer just a weekend gathering for young players trying the sport for the first time. It is functioning more like a genuine pathway, where results carry weight and finals are played with enough intensity to separate the most advanced pairs from the rest of the field. A 15-5 title win is a clear signal that one duo had already learned the basics of spacing, first-ball pressure and point building.

For Asia’s broader pickleball landscape, that kind of structure matters. Under-14 events are beginning to look less like side attractions and more like feeder systems for higher-level competition, especially when they produce finalists who can execute with this much composure. Bhavya and Miheet Dhaneja did more than win a title in Rajasthan. They offered a sharp snapshot of what the next wave of Asian pickleball talent can look like when coaching, tournament design and competitive repetition start to align.

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