<p>India demolished a depleted Guam 107-42 to win their second consecutive Group A match in Division B of the FIBA U-18 Women's Asian Championship at the Sree Kanteerava Indoor Stadium here on Monday.</p>.<p>Such was the Indian dominance, six players reached double figures. Srishti Suren (19 points, 9 rebounds) and Dharshini Thirunavukkarasu (15 points, 9 rebounds) stood out with fine performances. For Guam, Elysia Perez recorded 12 points.</p>.<p>India received a major boost after Pushpa Senthil Kumar, who sat out of the opening game against Iran due to an ankle injury, stepped into the floor as a substitute in the first quarter. </p>.<p>On the other hand, Guam, competing at the event with eight players, were reduced to seven following a knee injury to small forward Maria Taitano during their match against Singapore on Sunday. Maria was on crutches for the entirety of the period.</p>.<p>“We had no expectations,” said Guam coach Jimmy Yi. “We just came to have fun and results don’t matter. We did have a squad of 12 but four couldn’t make it here as they had to attend school. We are here just for the experience.”</p>.<p>It didn't take long for India to assert their authority as they took a healthy 28-9 lead at the end of the first quarter. The hosts were relentless on fast breaks, outscoring Guam 12-0. Especially Ishwarya, who finished the period with nine points. </p>.<p>Srishti stole the show in the next 10 minutes, with six points and three rebounds as India stretched their lead to 28 points (22-50) at the break.</p>.<p>India widened the gap to 65 points (85-31) in the third quarter. And the fourth was a mere formality as they crossed the 100 points barrier without much trouble. </p>.<p>Earlier in Division A, Asian heavyweights China survived a major scare before eking out a close 67-58 win over New Zealand in their Group B game.</p>.<p>On Tuesday, China and Japan will battle it out for Asian supremacy. </p>.<p class="ListBody"><span class="bold"><strong>Results: Division A: Group A: </strong></span>Australia: 106 (Mela Goodchild 27, Isabel Leigh Palmer 14, Juliva Malaeula Motuga 12, Emma Clarke 12, Jazmin Pamela Shelley 11, Isobel Anne Anstey 10) bt Chinese Taipei: 66 (Yu-Chieh Chen 21, Chia-Jung Lin 17); Korea: 84 (Jihyun Park 20, Seoi Eom 16, Sohee Lee 12, Leeseul Shin 12) bt Indonesia: 40.</p>.<p class="ListBody"><span class="bold"><strong>Group B: </strong></span>China: 67 (Chen Mingling15, Yuan LI 13, Ming Zheng 12, Ziting Tang 12, Yutong Liu 10) bt New Zealand: 58 (Charlisse Leger-Walker 22, Charlotte Whittaker 12, Leah Mafua 10); Japan: 130 (Shori Yamashita 25, Hikari Komura 20, Chinatsu Umeki 14, Myabi Sakamoto 12, Ririka Okuyama 12, Aoi Ishimaki 10) bt Malaysia: 31 (Sin Jie Tan 11).</p>.<p class="ListBody"><span class="bold"><strong>Division B: Group A:</strong></span> Iran: 70 (Fatemeh Aghazadegan 28, Negin Khameneh 22) bt Singapore: 53 (Shuting Wong 19, Carissa 12); India: 107 (Srishti Suren 19, Dharshini T 15) bt Guam: 42 (Elysia Perez 12).</p>.<p class="ListBody"><span class="bold"><strong>Group B:</strong></span> Kazakhstan: 67 (Alexandra Saitova 10, Valeriya Motovilova 17) bt Samoa: 51 (Cherish Manumaleuga 18, Talita Taufua 11); Syria: 66 (Noura Bshara 25, Anna Aghnanian 15, Julnar Mubarak 10) bt Hong Kong: 47 (Wing Yan Chan 16).</p>
<p>India demolished a depleted Guam 107-42 to win their second consecutive Group A match in Division B of the FIBA U-18 Women's Asian Championship at the Sree Kanteerava Indoor Stadium here on Monday.</p>.<p>Such was the Indian dominance, six players reached double figures. Srishti Suren (19 points, 9 rebounds) and Dharshini Thirunavukkarasu (15 points, 9 rebounds) stood out with fine performances. For Guam, Elysia Perez recorded 12 points.</p>.<p>India received a major boost after Pushpa Senthil Kumar, who sat out of the opening game against Iran due to an ankle injury, stepped into the floor as a substitute in the first quarter. </p>.<p>On the other hand, Guam, competing at the event with eight players, were reduced to seven following a knee injury to small forward Maria Taitano during their match against Singapore on Sunday. Maria was on crutches for the entirety of the period.</p>.<p>“We had no expectations,” said Guam coach Jimmy Yi. “We just came to have fun and results don’t matter. We did have a squad of 12 but four couldn’t make it here as they had to attend school. We are here just for the experience.”</p>.<p>It didn't take long for India to assert their authority as they took a healthy 28-9 lead at the end of the first quarter. The hosts were relentless on fast breaks, outscoring Guam 12-0. Especially Ishwarya, who finished the period with nine points. </p>.<p>Srishti stole the show in the next 10 minutes, with six points and three rebounds as India stretched their lead to 28 points (22-50) at the break.</p>.<p>India widened the gap to 65 points (85-31) in the third quarter. And the fourth was a mere formality as they crossed the 100 points barrier without much trouble. </p>.<p>Earlier in Division A, Asian heavyweights China survived a major scare before eking out a close 67-58 win over New Zealand in their Group B game.</p>.<p>On Tuesday, China and Japan will battle it out for Asian supremacy. </p>.<p class="ListBody"><span class="bold"><strong>Results: Division A: Group A: </strong></span>Australia: 106 (Mela Goodchild 27, Isabel Leigh Palmer 14, Juliva Malaeula Motuga 12, Emma Clarke 12, Jazmin Pamela Shelley 11, Isobel Anne Anstey 10) bt Chinese Taipei: 66 (Yu-Chieh Chen 21, Chia-Jung Lin 17); Korea: 84 (Jihyun Park 20, Seoi Eom 16, Sohee Lee 12, Leeseul Shin 12) bt Indonesia: 40.</p>.<p class="ListBody"><span class="bold"><strong>Group B: </strong></span>China: 67 (Chen Mingling15, Yuan LI 13, Ming Zheng 12, Ziting Tang 12, Yutong Liu 10) bt New Zealand: 58 (Charlisse Leger-Walker 22, Charlotte Whittaker 12, Leah Mafua 10); Japan: 130 (Shori Yamashita 25, Hikari Komura 20, Chinatsu Umeki 14, Myabi Sakamoto 12, Ririka Okuyama 12, Aoi Ishimaki 10) bt Malaysia: 31 (Sin Jie Tan 11).</p>.<p class="ListBody"><span class="bold"><strong>Division B: Group A:</strong></span> Iran: 70 (Fatemeh Aghazadegan 28, Negin Khameneh 22) bt Singapore: 53 (Shuting Wong 19, Carissa 12); India: 107 (Srishti Suren 19, Dharshini T 15) bt Guam: 42 (Elysia Perez 12).</p>.<p class="ListBody"><span class="bold"><strong>Group B:</strong></span> Kazakhstan: 67 (Alexandra Saitova 10, Valeriya Motovilova 17) bt Samoa: 51 (Cherish Manumaleuga 18, Talita Taufua 11); Syria: 66 (Noura Bshara 25, Anna Aghnanian 15, Julnar Mubarak 10) bt Hong Kong: 47 (Wing Yan Chan 16).</p>