Badminton

Lakshya Sen Targets World Number One Ranking as India Badminton Stars Dominate BWF World Tour in Spring 2026

Lakshya Sen targets the world number one ranking as Indian badminton players dominate the BWF World Tour in spring 2026, with India fielding its strongest-ever Thomas and Uber Cup squads.
Indian badminton player executing powerful smash on BWF World Tour court

Lakshya Sen is on the verge of becoming India’s first-ever world number one in men’s singles badminton as the 24-year-old from Almora dominates the BWF World Tour in spring 2026. Currently ranked world number two after title victories at the All England Open and the India Open, Sen needs just one more Super 750 or Super 1000 title to overtake Denmark’s Viktor Axelsen at the top of the rankings. India’s broader badminton programme is also surging, with the country fielding its strongest-ever squads for the upcoming Thomas and Uber Cup in Bangkok.

The momentum across Indian badminton is part of a wider renaissance in Indian sports, alongside India hockey’s surge in the FIH Pro League 2026 and IPL 2026 kicking off with new rules and record excitement that are creating unprecedented excitement for Indian sports fans. Badminton’s rise, however, is arguably the most dramatic transformation story of them all.

Lakshya Sen’s Historic 2026 Campaign

Sen’s form in early 2026 has been extraordinary. His All England Open triumph in March — where he defeated Axelsen 21-18, 19-21, 21-15 in a gruelling final — was the first Indian men’s singles title at the prestigious tournament since Prakash Padukone’s historic victory in 1980. The win catapulted Sen from world number five to number two in a single week.

Two weeks later, Sen delivered another masterclass at the India Open Super 750 in New Delhi, sweeping through the draw without dropping a set. His semifinal demolition of Chinese Taipei’s Chou Tien-chen (21-12, 21-9) and final victory over Indonesia’s Anthony Sinisuka Ginting (21-14, 21-16) showcased the explosive attacking game that coaches say has improved dramatically under the guidance of Indonesian trainer Tan Kim Her.

If Sen wins the upcoming Malaysia Open or Singapore Open, both Super 750 events, he will have accumulated enough ranking points to overtake Axelsen. The Badminton World Federation’s ranking system updates weekly, and Sen’s consistency across tournaments has narrowed the gap to fewer than 3,000 points.

PV Sindhu’s Return and the Doubles Revolution

In women’s singles, PV Sindhu’s return from a knee injury sustained in late 2025 has been cautious but encouraging. The two-time Olympic medallist reached the quarterfinals at the All England Open and is targeting full fitness for the Uber Cup. Sindhu remains ranked world number eight and is widely regarded as a medal contender for any tournament she enters at full strength.

India’s doubles programme has arguably seen the most dramatic improvement. Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty continue to dominate men’s doubles, holding a world number three ranking after winning the French Open and reaching the finals of the All England. In mixed doubles, the new pairing of Dhruv Kapila and Ashwini Ponnappa has broken into the world top 10 for the first time.

Badminton Association of India president Himanta Biswa Sarma credits the success to a Rs 100 crore annual investment in the high-performance programme, which includes foreign coaches, dedicated physiotherapy teams and access to international training camps. India now has 11 players and pairs in the world top 20 across all five disciplines — the highest count in the country’s history.

Thomas and Uber Cup: India’s Strongest Squads Ever

The Thomas Cup (men’s team) and Uber Cup (women’s team) championships, scheduled for May 2026 in Bangkok, will feature India’s most formidable squads. The men’s team includes Sen, HS Prannoy, Kidambi Srikanth, the Satwik-Chirag doubles pair and emerging talent Priyanshu Rajawat — a lineup that makes India serious contenders for the title.

India reached the Thomas Cup final in 2022 and won the semifinal in 2024 before falling to China in the final. Coaches believe the 2026 squad has the depth to go all the way. The women’s squad, led by Sindhu and supported by young stars like Malvika Bansod, Aakarshi Kashyap and Treesa Jolly, is targeting a quarterfinal finish at minimum.

Team sports success adds a new dimension to Indian badminton, which has historically relied on individual brilliance. The shift mirrors developments across latest Indian sports news where team events are gaining commercial and media attention alongside individual competitions.

Grassroots Development Fuels the Pipeline

India’s badminton success is not solely a story of elite athletes. The grassroots infrastructure has expanded dramatically, with the number of registered badminton academies crossing 2,500 nationwide in 2026. The Pullela Gopichand Academy in Hyderabad, which has produced Sen, Sindhu, Saina Nehwal and dozens of national champions, now operates satellite centres in five states.

Private investment in badminton infrastructure is rising. The Premier Badminton League, now in its eighth season, has attracted team owners from the Adani, Tata and Wipro groups. Player auction prices have increased 60 per cent year-on-year, with Sen commanding the highest bid at Rs 85 lakh. The league’s broadcast deal with JioStar is worth Rs 120 crore over three years, providing sustainable revenue for player development.

State governments are also investing. Telangana’s Gachibowli Indoor Stadium has been upgraded to BWF-certified international standard, while Odisha has built a world-class badminton centre in Bhubaneswar. These facilities ensure that future generations of Indian badminton players have access to training infrastructure comparable to powerhouses like China, Indonesia and Denmark. Follow all India hockey coverage for more stories about India’s sporting achievements on the international stage.

What World Number One Would Mean for Indian Sport

If Lakshya Sen reaches world number one, he would become just the third Indian to hold a top ranking in any individual Olympic sport, joining Viswanathan Anand in chess and Abhinav Bindra’s world number one position in shooting. The achievement would represent a validation of India’s investment in badminton and could catalyse further funding and grassroots participation.

For Sen personally, the focus remains on process over rankings. “I don’t think about numbers,” he told reporters after the India Open. “Every match, every rally — that is where my mind is. If I play my best badminton, the ranking will take care of itself.” With Indian football’s ambitions in the FIFA 2027 qualifiers, spring 2026 is shaping up as one of the most exciting periods in Indian sport.

Rohit Joshi

Rohit Joshi

Rohit Joshi is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Daily Tips. With over a decade of experience in digital journalism and editorial leadership, he oversees all editorial operations — from story selection and fact-checking to maintaining the publication's standards of accuracy and fairness. He specialises in business, economy, and technology reporting, and founded Daily Tips to create a trusted, independent platform covering the full spectrum of Indian life.

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