Tai Tzu, who clinched five titles last year, has defeated Saina nine times in last 10 meetings with only three of them going into a decider, albeit for a lost cause.
Last Sunday, Saina suffered her seventh straight loss to the Taiwanese at the Indonesia Masters final.
"You see the number of tournaments she has been won last year, so it is not only the Indians who are losing to her. She is the best player right now, she is tricky, she is very focussed and consistently reaching the finals and we have to look upto her," Saina told reporters.
"Tai Tzu almost lost to Michelle Li in the first round at Indonesia, so we will have to figure out a way to beat her. I think it is a matter of time, we have it in us to do well against her," she added.
Sindhu too have found the going tough against Tai Tzu, who has defeated the Indian eight times in 11 meetings. The 23-year-old Taiwanese girl has beaten Sindhu in the last four encounters.
"Well, ofcourse it was different scoring system. She is doing well, she is consistent. But its not like we can't beat her. I always feel it depends on how one plays on that day, we might have ups and downs and we need to be focussed to beat her," she added.
Saina, who recovered from an ankle injury, to enter her first Major final since the knee injury-induced ouster from the Rio Olympics at Indonesia, said she is looking to stay fit and not losing her sleep over results in tournaments.
Asked how she will handle the workload during the hectic season ahead, Saina snapped: "I am not looking forward to any tournament, just want to stay fit."
Later when she was termed as a 'title-contender' for the India Open, Saina sarcastic response was: "Last few months, I was not a title contender, so I don't know from where it is coming. It's okay I am performing well so hope to do well."
The India Open Super 500 tournament lost a lot of sheen with the last-moment withdrawl of world no 1s Viktor Axelsen and Tai Tzu in a draw which doesn't have the top Japanese or Chinese players.
BAI general secretary Anup Narang said:"We had some withdraws, Viktor Axelsen and Tai Tzu Ying pulled out at the last moment. But we have Carolina Marin, Saina Nehwal, PV Sindhu and Krishnamachari Srikanth, so we have a very good list of players playing.
Besides Saina and Sindhu, Olympic champion Carolina Marin and World No 4 Thai Ratchanok Inthanon are the other top players.
The two-time former world championship Marin will be in her third week after playing at Malaysia Masters and Indonesia Masters.
Asked why did she plan to participate in three tournaments on the trot, Marin said: "It is tough year for every player since the calender has changed and my strategy may be is to play three in a roll because perhaps I am not comfortable with other tournaments later in the year and also I will get good time to prepare for All England.
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