"She is definitely not back to her best and has some way to go before she can aspire to win big tournaments again. She needs some more time, may be in terms of physical and strength aspects in which she needs to improve," said the former national men's champion here today.
Saina, who underwent surgery after returning from Rio where she failed to progress beyond the first round, today made it to the quarterfinals of the Macau Open Grand Prix Gold tournament, in which she is the top seed.
"In another 4-6 weeks (she should be back to top level) once she starts high intensity training. She has enough time when she enters that (Modi memorial) competition and if nothing goes wrong, from end-January onwards she will be a strong contender.
Vimal was quite pleased with the way the London Olympics bronze medal winner's injured leg has held up.
Vimal said it was the former world no. One's decision to
start competing once again after the pain following the surgery had subsided.
"She has played some tough players and it's the third tournament in a row. She lost in first round and then reached quarterfinals in the second. All these will give her confidence in her climb to the top," Vimal remarked.
"When she says I am okay, it's her body. She's a grown up girl, one of the top players in the world, and knows her body. This I learned from Prakash -- to take responsibility. She said she felt good and wanted to compete.
"It's good for the next line of players to push and she should just think she is in the next line of players," Vimal elaborated.
He, however, brushed aside any suggestion that in hindsight it would have been better had Saina not competed in the Rio Games after feeling some discomfort before the competition commenced in August.
According to Vimal, Saina felt stiffness after the first practice session in Rio and wanted to take pain-killing injections and was even looking forward to reaching the quarter-finals before things turned for the worse.
