Speaking for the first time after arriving home, Sindhu said, "I am very happy and excited. I am thankful to everyone including the Badminton Association for supporting and encouraging me."
Despite these mentionable events we have tomorrow, Indian fans are nervously waiting for the Hockey battle against Belgium, as it may place in the Indian history of the Olympics.
Ying has lost the finals and settled for the Silver medal while Sindhu took the medal podium by winning the Bronze medal, the second medal for India in the Tokyo Olympics.
Sindhu has proven that she is not here to learn but to create history through her stellar performances in her first Olympics and suddenly became a promising Badminton sensation of the country.
26-year-old Sindhu will decorate the medal podium by becoming the second Indian athlete to win two individual Olympic medals if she triumphs over the Chinese shuttler on Sunday.
A native of Assam, Lovlina has defeated Nien-Chin of the Chinese Taipei 4:1 and confirmed her entry into the semifinal by assuring a second Olympic medal for India.
Mary Kom has bidded farewell from the world's biggest sporting event with a defeat and, of course, with the fact that she will forever be the legend and doyen in India's sporting history.
PV Sindhu and Deepika Kumari had delivered an impressive show on the fields, and not to forget about boxer Pooja Rani, who is just one win away from a medal, with her amazing victory on Wednesday.