A total of seven Indian shuttlers, including London Olympic bronze medallist Saina Nehwal, have qualified for the Rio Olympics and their competitors will be decided in the draw which will be out on July 26.
"I believe the draw doesn't matter so much if you are really looking for a medal. You might have an initial bad round or at the quarterfinals. So I am not worried about that. I know the preparation have been going well," Gopichand told reporters on the sideline of the launch of his international academy at Greater Noida.
Saina and women's doubles pair of Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnappa have already played at the London Olympics but it would be a first time experience for Srikanth, Sindhu and men's doubles pair of Manu Attri and B Sumeeth Reddy.
"So it is important to shut the stars and glitch of the Olympics and focus on the game. Last time we had stayed at a hotel but this time we will be at the Village as our event is there," he added.
"I have seen strange things happening in Olympics so we
should just go with our preparation and a positive mind and if we have a small chance we should grab it," Gopichand added.
It has not been a good year for Srikanth and Sindhu as they made a series of early exits and Gopichand put the blame on the hectic Olympic qualification schedule.
"Sindhu has been working hard. She has delivered in the past at big events such as World Championship and Asian Games and I am hoping she does well here," said the Dronacharya Awardee.
Talking about the competition in men's and women's singles, Gopichand said: "The men's singles competition has remained pretty much the same over the last four years. The best three will still be Lee Chong Wei, Lin Dan and Chen Long.
"It is a much open field in women's but nonetheless it boils down to two good back-to-back matches," he added.
Gopichand said most of the top women's singles players have been inconsistent this year and there won't be any clear favourites for an Olympic gold.
Asked about Ratchanok, who won three consecutive titles at India, Malaysia and Singapore, Gopichand said: "She has won three back to back tournaments and then she lost early in the next two events so all of them have been very inconsistent. So it very difficult to predict and it depends on the conditions we get there."
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