"I've not played him ever before... Had a little bit of trouble to see what his game was all about. He played some really good stuff at the beginning of the match. After the first game, I was more in control. It's good to win 3-0. Hopefully I'll play better tomorrow and as the tournament goes on," Ghosal said after his 47-minute battle.
Ghosal and Mangaonkar are the two Indians left in the fray as wild card after promising youngster Ramit Tandon lost to Chirs Simpson of England 11-9, 15-13, 11-7 in 61 minutes.
"It was really, really tough," Simpson said. "He's got quite outstanding racket work. It made me feel very nervous because I never knew what shot I was going to play. To be honest, I felt like I was running all over, while he stayed on the T. But I played the big points well in the first and second games, and that was crucial."
Meanwhile, top seed Marwan Elshorbagy of Egypt cruised past Sanjay Singh Chal of Malaysia 12-14, 11-7, 11-4, 11-7 in 39 minutes to set up a quarterfinals battle against Rex Hedrick of Australia.
