It is okay, many people will think my career will end and I wont come back. I also think somewhere deep in my heart that maybe it is the end of my career, so lets see how it is. Maybe, you never know.Saina Nehwal is stretching after a long training session at the Karnataka Badminton Association courts in Bangalore. Her knee hurts. Its only been a few weeks since it went under a surgeons knife. It hurts when she lunges. It hurts when she leaps to smash. It hurts when she slides sideways to retrieve. This damn knee that started hurting a week before she was to leave for Rio de Janerio for her third Olympic games. That hurt all the way on the flight there. That really hurt as she hobbled through her first match. That excruciatingly hurt as she limped out of the Games on losing her second match.It has been a little over a week since Saina got back on the training court. It has been hard. Coach Vimal Kumar, a genial man with a warm smile, is in no hurry. He intentionally mellows the intensity of their sessions. Saina, usually a terrier around court, is visibly slower. Her movements are noticeably lethargic, her mobility obviously impaired. Being bed ridden for over a month has meant theres been no access to the gym. So she is carrying a couple of extra kilos.She grunts and moans as shuttles fall in front of her despairing racquet. She hollers an Arrey as false shots clamp into the net. She flails her arms exasperated as she fails to reach one. Once the worlds top ranked player, Saina can feel it, deep in her heart, that at least in this moment she is a shadow of the beastly athlete with the glittering CV. She is learning to accept. To concede.I just want to work hard, I just want to take care of my body and keep working on the areas that were weak and not think about winning or losing, she philosophically muses. I will be more than happy if people think I am finished, it is nice in a way, people think a lot about me, maybe now they wont!I am going to think about the next one year, it is year by year now, I am not going to set a target for the next 5-6 years now. My mind may change in the next one, two or three years, so for me it is just about how to take care of my body and be in good shape because these injuries are quite painful. Even if I win a tournament, the happiness is not so much because of the amount of pain the injury gives.In sport, pain is a professional hazard. Athletes learn to embrace its presence within their bodies. In Rio, as a vicious pain sent tremors through her tiny frame, Saina stayed resolute, never allowing the world outside access to the agony. On inspecting her knee when she returned, the surgeon operating on Saina was gobsmacked she even stepped onto court. For Saina, once she was at the Olympics, not competing was not a choice. It was confronting the demons when she returned that was the real challenge. She remembers turning one night to her mother, a constant companion through the ups and downs, to ask, This is so painful, what will happen now?Kya ho guya, nothing has happened, just play, Saina remembers hearing from her mother in response. She is the one who has made me stand here again today, she is always supporting me. I am so happy I have such wonderful parents who in the worst times also are very strong. So many parents crack at such a point, but hats off to both of them, so very strong, more than me I would say.Besides her mother and the ever encouraging Vimal, Saina also found specialist advice from Heath Matthews, an expert in sports science and medicine who is working out of Mumbai. As she lay in bed after surgery, Saina remembers Matthews assuring voice telling her Dont worry, we will make you get back soon. An achilles tendon issue had scuppered the latter half of her season last year and forced her out for the first three months of 2016. The flare up in her knee ahead of Rio has alerted Saina to a pattern. Matthews and his team are now focused on strengthening her legs and gluteal muscles - in essence rebuilding her body after years of rigorous work on an ultra-competitive circuit.The return to competitive play is being carefully charted out. For now, Saina is entered to play at the China Open from November 15, followed by the Hong Kong Open from November 22. A final call on her participation will be taken in the next few days. Saina says she is keen just to play matches without concerning herself with the results. She recognises that she wont be 100% even if she does step onto the court in China but insists she will try her best. Her endeavour is to stay in contention for the year ending Superseries Finals in Dubai, contested between an elite field of the worlds top eight players. Saina is currently eighth on the rankings table for this event, which is tabulated differently to the world rankings. She can sneak in with reasonable performances at these two tournaments.However, it is blatantly evident that her body isnt willing just yet to fully co-operate with a desperate mind. At the end of a several rapid exchanges with her sparring partner, Saina gulps in air and bends over for an extended period to gather her breath. When she rests courtside, toweling the sweat down, a steely gaze, seemingly staring into nothing overtakes her face. Around her, eager kids are learning the ropes, hustling around an arena reverberating with the sounds of shuttles exploding off racquets. Saina Nehwal, all of 26 years old, already sounds like she has lived a lifetime in the sport.It does mean a lot to me because otherwise I wouldnt be back here playing, she says. I started playing badminton because my parents liked this sport, I didnt like it. I just wanted to give my best and win as much as possible. I am happy that I have won so much - the number one ranking, an Olympic medal, a world championship medal, stood on the podium for all the big events - so I am happy about that. I dont have to set any target now, it is just to stay fit and if I am happy and doing well, the results will follow but I am not thinking much about that at the moment.It is time to get back up. To play. Keep hurting, you damned knee. Jonas Hector Trikot Kinder . -- Stanfords Kevin Danser knelt on one knee and hardly moved on the sideline as Michigan State celebrated its Rose Bowl victory and his Cardinal teammates made their way to the locker room. Trikot Marvin Plattenhardt . 9. Price, heading to the 2014 Olympics for Canada, was named the First Star after posting wins in three starts with a 1.00 goals-against average and a .971 save percentage. http://www.fussballwmtrikotsdeutschland.de/trikot-selbst-gestalten.html . -- Vincent Lecavalier got everything but the desired result in his return to Tampa Bay. Dfb Trikot Damen 2018 Auswärts . A lawyer for MLB, Matthew Menchel, confirmed Wednesday the league dropped its case against Biogenesis of America, its owner Anthony Bosch and several other individuals. The lawsuit had accused Biogenesis and Bosch of conspiring with players to violate their contracts by providing them with banned performance-enhancing substances. Julian Draxler Trikot Bestellen . How great will be revealed in the next couple of days at the board of governors meeting in Pebble Beach, Calif.The Mannequin Challenge is the latest craze to hit social media - and the stars of WWE NXT may have produced the best one yet! The aim is simple enough - stand still and strike an amusing pose - with Bundesliga outfit Borussia Dortmund and NFL side Pittsburgh Steelers providing fantastic efforts.WWE may have just raised the bar, though, with their attempt at the companys Performance Center in Orlando, Florida. Watch NOW TV Watch Sky Sports for just ?£6.99. No contract. Watch the video above to check out their work, as stars such as NXT Champion Shinsuke Nakamura, Johnny Gargano, Tommaso Ciampa, and NXT Tag Team Champions The Revival act like statues.Never has time in the gym or in the ring been so static!Head to skysports.com/WWE every week for the latest set of WWE NXT results. Tommaso Ciampa and Johnny Gargano are two NXTs top stars WWEs next pay-per-view, Survivor Series, is live on Sky Sports Box Office on Sunday, November 20.WWE Survivor Series booking detailsWWE Survivor Series will be shown live on Sky Sports Box Office (channel 491) and Sky Sports HD Box Office (channel 492) from midnight on Sunday, Novembber 20 (Monday morning).ddddddddddddWWE Survivor Series will repeated on Sky Sports Box Office (channel 491) BUT NOT Sky Sports HD Box Office (channel 492) between 10am on Monday, November 21 and 10pm on Thursday, November 24.WWE Survivor Series will cost £19.95 for viewers in the United Kingdom and €24.95 for customers in the Republic of Ireland, while a live blog of the event will run on skysports.com and the Sky Sports apps.You can order the show online by visiting this link: https://my.sky.com/orderboxoffice/?DCMP=SurvivorSeriesYou can also order the pay-per-view over the phone from Tuesday, November 8: UK viewers should call 03442 410 888, while customers in the Republic of Ireland should call 0818 220 225. (There may be an additional charge for telephone bookings).You will be able to order the show via your Sky remote nearer the event:Sky+: Press the box office button on your remote, then click the sports tab followed by WWE Survivor Series.Sky Q: Press Home on your Sky Q remote, select TV guide, then Box Office and then WWE Survivor Series. Enter your TV Pin if prompted. (Only bookings via Sky TV remote are recordable using Sky Plus).Sky TV residential customers only. Commercial customers contact Sky for price and to order. Sky Box Office terms apply. Cable customers should contact their local cable operator. Also See: WWE news WWE videos WWE features WWE on Sky Sports Wholesale NFL HoodiesCheap JerseysCheap NFL Black JerseysNFL Jerseys From ChinaCheap NFL T-shirtsYouth NFL Jerseys CheapDiscount NFL Jerseys ' ' '