Vittinghus had clinched his maiden Super Series title at Australia Open and also helped Denmark clinch the Thomas Cup trophy but he had to undergo a surgery when he suddenly developed acute pain due to appendicitis before the China Open in October.
"In October, I got appendicitis and I got my appendix removed. I came to know about it after I developed a pain just 10 hours before I was about to board the flight for China Open. I was lucky in a way because it would have been frightening if I had that sort of unbearable pain on flight. So due to the surgery, I could not play in China and Hong Kong Open and so I couldn't qualify for the Dubai Super Series Final. It was a forced break," the World No. 14 shuttler told PTI.
Vittinghus said he is looking to make up for the lost ranking points with a good show at the Syed Modi tournament.
"I'm also looking to get some extra points to qualify for World Championships in August because I missed out of the tournaments in November and December and I need the ranking points so from that perspective also it is an important event for me," said the second seed, who is now the top-ranked player in the draw after top seed Thailand's Tanongsak Saensomboonsuk withdrew last evening.
"I will be able to get back into the move and rhythm that I have been missing since October and the field here is not that strong. The top 10 players here are strong but after that there is a gap, so that is definitely one of the reasons why I decided to play here," he said.
Asked if he was surprised when P V Sindhu won the Olympic silver, Vittinghus said: "I was in Rio as a commentator for Danish TV, so we were quite surprised when Sindhu suddenly reached the finals but when you watch the matches in Rio then you can see she was playing one of the best women's singles from the start and even afterward she proved that she is one of the best players in the world."
"So the girls we have now are very young. When Tine quit the oldest player we had at the National center was just 19 and usually in Danish women's singles, they don't reach the highest level until 25-26 and the problem now is we don't have any one to kind of look upto and reach that level."
"I don't think we will see China become as dominating as they used to be and it is very good for the sports because one country being dominant kills the interest in the sport," he said.
