<p>Japanese world badminton number one Kento Momota blamed his own "weakness" as he crashed out of the Tokyo Olympics in the first round on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Unseeded South Korean Heo Kwang-hee beat Momota 21-15, 21-19 to end his gold-medal bid after just two games, a day after Japanese tennis superstar Naomi Osaka also made an early exit.</p>.<p>Momota won a record 11 titles in 2019 to cement his place as the undisputed best badminton player in the world.</p>.<p>But he was almost forced to retire last year after a car crash that left him with career-threatening injuries, and he admitted his killer instinct of old had not yet returned.</p>.<p>"Previously, when a game went like this, I would be able to recover and think clearly," said a visibly stunned Momota.</p>.<p>"I would have been able to pull through. But I couldn't recover tonight, and that's down to my weakness."</p>.<p>Momota fractured his eye socket in the accident in January last year which killed the driver of the vehicle taking him to the airport after winning the Malaysia Masters.</p>.<p>He suffered double vision and needed surgery on a bone near his eye that delayed his comeback, leaving him fearing his career was over.</p>.<p>He returned to make his Olympic debut in Tokyo -- five years after being banned from the 2016 Rio Games for illegal gambling.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/tokyo-2020-hashimoto-claims-all-around-title-for-japan-1013891.html" target="_blank">Tokyo 2020: Hashimoto claims all-around title for Japan</a></strong></p>.<p>But his confidence deserted him when Heo began to gain a foothold in the first game, and he was unable to reassert control.</p>.<p>"I was 10-5 up in the first game, I wasn't moving badly and I had an attacking image in my mind," said Momota.</p>.<p>"But then I lost a few points in a row and my opponent beat me to 11, which affected me mentally and I didn't recover. I came up short."</p>.<p>Momota admitted making his Olympic debut had overwhelmed him.</p>.<p>"It's really difficult to go about things the way you usually do when you're playing on this stage," he said.</p>.<p>"A lot of things happened, but thanks to the efforts of many people I got to feel the tension and experience what it's like to play at an Olympics. I really appreciate that."</p>.<p>Momota smiled incredulously as his shots failed to find their range early in the game, but looked ashen-faced when it became clear that he was in serious danger.</p>.<p>He then sealed his own fate when he hit the net to end the match.</p>.<p>"I think I wanted to win too much," he said. "Rather than him being able to read me, I didn't have any margin for error and I started to play within myself."</p>.<p>Momota's early exit follows similar upsets for high-profile Japanese athletes, including tennis player Osaka and gymnast Kohei Uchimura.</p>.<p>Badminton number two seed Chou Tien-Chen also suffered a fright on Wednesday, but saw off 19-year-old Canadian Brian Yang 21-18, 16-21, 22-20.</p>
<p>Japanese world badminton number one Kento Momota blamed his own "weakness" as he crashed out of the Tokyo Olympics in the first round on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Unseeded South Korean Heo Kwang-hee beat Momota 21-15, 21-19 to end his gold-medal bid after just two games, a day after Japanese tennis superstar Naomi Osaka also made an early exit.</p>.<p>Momota won a record 11 titles in 2019 to cement his place as the undisputed best badminton player in the world.</p>.<p>But he was almost forced to retire last year after a car crash that left him with career-threatening injuries, and he admitted his killer instinct of old had not yet returned.</p>.<p>"Previously, when a game went like this, I would be able to recover and think clearly," said a visibly stunned Momota.</p>.<p>"I would have been able to pull through. But I couldn't recover tonight, and that's down to my weakness."</p>.<p>Momota fractured his eye socket in the accident in January last year which killed the driver of the vehicle taking him to the airport after winning the Malaysia Masters.</p>.<p>He suffered double vision and needed surgery on a bone near his eye that delayed his comeback, leaving him fearing his career was over.</p>.<p>He returned to make his Olympic debut in Tokyo -- five years after being banned from the 2016 Rio Games for illegal gambling.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/tokyo-2020-hashimoto-claims-all-around-title-for-japan-1013891.html" target="_blank">Tokyo 2020: Hashimoto claims all-around title for Japan</a></strong></p>.<p>But his confidence deserted him when Heo began to gain a foothold in the first game, and he was unable to reassert control.</p>.<p>"I was 10-5 up in the first game, I wasn't moving badly and I had an attacking image in my mind," said Momota.</p>.<p>"But then I lost a few points in a row and my opponent beat me to 11, which affected me mentally and I didn't recover. I came up short."</p>.<p>Momota admitted making his Olympic debut had overwhelmed him.</p>.<p>"It's really difficult to go about things the way you usually do when you're playing on this stage," he said.</p>.<p>"A lot of things happened, but thanks to the efforts of many people I got to feel the tension and experience what it's like to play at an Olympics. I really appreciate that."</p>.<p>Momota smiled incredulously as his shots failed to find their range early in the game, but looked ashen-faced when it became clear that he was in serious danger.</p>.<p>He then sealed his own fate when he hit the net to end the match.</p>.<p>"I think I wanted to win too much," he said. "Rather than him being able to read me, I didn't have any margin for error and I started to play within myself."</p>.<p>Momota's early exit follows similar upsets for high-profile Japanese athletes, including tennis player Osaka and gymnast Kohei Uchimura.</p>.<p>Badminton number two seed Chou Tien-Chen also suffered a fright on Wednesday, but saw off 19-year-old Canadian Brian Yang 21-18, 16-21, 22-20.</p>