World No. 5 Nehwal, who created history four years ago in London by winning a bronze medal which was the first by an Indian in the sport, was left dazed after she lost 18-21 19-21 to world No. 61 Maria Ulitina of Ukraine in a match that lasted 39 minutes.
The former world no. 1, who had beaten Brazilian Vicente Lohaynny on August 11 in the three-woman Group G, had carried a knee injury into the Games, a fact which came to the fore after her loss.
According to the star Indian shuttler, the injury happened during training before the Olympics and it got worse after she reached Rio.
"It happened just before the Olympics about one and half weeks back. It happened during training and got aggravated after coming here," she said.
"She played better but I was not able to move on the court. I tried for improvement but was not successful," she explained further.
Saina's exit left Indian hopes in badminton on the shoulders of two other singles players who are both ranked outside the top ten - K Srikanth in men's singles and P V Sindhu in women's singles.
Both will be seen in action later today.
Indian shooters ended their campaign on a disappointing note when rifle shooters Gagan Narang, bronze medalist in London in 2012, and Chain Singh crashed out of the 3-position event - the last one scheduled in Olympics programme.
Narang looked out of sorts from the beginning and was trailing far behind before eventually finishing in the 33rd place out of 44 with 1162.
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